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Dancing on the Rail
by Vanessa Manko
May 2004
May Moves
May and dance are a perfect match. Warmer weather. Greener grasses. Its a month in which everything seems to begin afresh and so too does the New York dance community for May begins the season of the outdoor dance performance. If you have not yet had the pleasure of viewing dance al fresco, May and beyond is your chance to experience the heady mix of movement and fresh air. Theres plenty of site-specific, mixed-bill and indoor performance as wellall works worth far more than the minimal ticket prices.
Choreography: Noemie Lafrance, "Noir" by Sens Production © 2004 Photo by Richard Termine.
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Noemie LaFrances Noir
Site-specific choreographer Noemie LaFrance brought audiences into a clock tower in lower Manhatttan for her Bessie-award winning Descent earlier this year. Now, the Canadian choreographer who is based in Williamsburg, has set her sights on a parking garage for Noir, her latest work inspired by American film noir of the 1940s and 50s. The requisite film noir elements are all present herefemme fatales, fedoras, and fear. Aiming to create a movement style that bespeaks both the tension of this film genre and the requisite male-female, love-hate relationships, LaFrances dancers slink and slither in partnering sequences that at once feature women as passive and rag-dollish, and then present them moving with a burst of potent, sexual agency. LaFrance has also tried to develop a sense of suspense within the choreography, which includes sudden shifts of weight and a palpable play of resistance as couples experiment with leaning on and pulling away from each. Fittingly, audience members will view Noir from the seats of parked cars, the windshield serving as a kind of film screen and the music heard on the car radio. LaFrance, whose chosen sites are often part of the form as well as the aesthetic of the dance, hopes that the "raw, urban, inhuman, cold" feel of the parking garage creates a foreboding aura in line with tone of such noir films as Mildred Pierce and The Big Sleep.
May 5 May 22, Wed-Sat, 7:30 and 9:30 pm
The Delancy and Essex Municipal Parking Garage, 105 Essex Street on the Lower East Side, subway F, J/M/Z to Delcancey/Essex Street
Tickets: Front Seat $30, Back Seat $20, Members $25, Students and Seniors $15, B.Y.O.Car $100
www.sensproduction.org; www.danspaceproject.org
Annie-B Parson and Paul Lazars Big Dance Theater in Antigone: As Played and Danced by the Three Fates on Their Way to Becoming the Three Graces
Annie-B Parson and Paul Lazar formed Big Dance Theater in 1991, forging an interdisciplinary form of performance, one that drew on both dance and theater and broke down traditional boundaries between the two sister disciplines. Often working on pieces that are dance-theater adaptations of literary works, Big Dance Theater, in collaboration with playwright Mac Wellman and composer Cynthia Hopkins, now takes on the Greeks in its rendition of Antigone, imagined, as the pr explains before "Sophocles, Doric columns, and democracy." The work is a fragmented pastiche of dance, song, and theater and focuses on three Fates who eventually become the Three Graces.
Through May 23, Tues-Sat, 8 pm, Sat. 2pm, Sun, 3pm, Classic Stage Company, 135 East 13th Street, 212-279-4200, www.classicstage.com; www.bigdancetheater.org
The Subway Series
Mets and Yankees fans are not the only ones who can relish in the excitement of a subway series. Along with the Puffin Foundation, Dancespace Project hosts a subway series of its own, and offers dance fans a chance to see works by urban youth from four boroughsBrooklyn, Queens, Bronx, and Manhattan. Organized by Nancy Duncan and Ivan Sygoda, the Subway Series includes works developed by inner-city youth, exploring issues that these kids face in their daily lives. This years Subway Series features students from the Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance (BAAD), Brooklyns Packer Collegiate, Harlems Groove With Me, a "safe space" for teenage girls, and Queens Frank Sinatra School of the Arts.
May 7 and 8, 8:30 pm, $10, Danspace Project St. Marks Church in-the-Bowery, 131 East 10th Street, www.danspaceproject.org
Dancemopolitan series at Joes Pub
Choreographer Doug Elkins hosts the May performances of Dancenow/NYCs new Dancemopolitan series at Joes Pub. Among the several choreographers to present works are some of Brooklyns own, including Nicholas Leichter and Heidi Latsky. Also on the program are Ellis Wood Dance, Dixie Fun Lee Dance Theater, Clare Byrne, The Comedy Trio Happy Hour, Subtle Changes/Roger C. Jeffrey, Laura Peterson and Dancers and special guests. Series such as this provide a fun venue for choreographers to present their works and for audiences to take in some experimental dance, drink in hand.
May 7 and 8, 9:30, $15, Joes Pub at The Public Theater, 425 Lafayette Street
www.joespub.com, www.dancenownyc.org
Douglas Dunns The Higgs field
You know its truly spring in New York when you see the modern dancers in the parks. And Douglas Dunn, a longtime innovator on the downtown dance scene who has been choreographing and performing since the 70s, takes his work to Central Park. His new work The Higgs field draws on the scientific theories of Mr. Higgs. Here Dunn explores rest, symmetry, matter, weight, temperature and force. No stranger to collaboration, Dunn has worked to meld dance with poetry, film and visual art and his foray into physics will likely take its place among his other successful collaborations. The Higgs field will run for four weekends in May and June.
May 15-16, 29-30 and June 5-6, 19-20, Sat-Sun Noon-1pm, FREE, Central Park, The Pinetum, West Side of Central Park at 85th Street
Yanira Castros Verano and more
In an eclectic mix of dancebreakdance, a piece featuring chocolate, an all female quartet and moreBRIC Studio hosts an Out of Space series, sponsored by Danspace Project. Featuring several Brooklyn-based choreographers, the evening will include Yanira Castros Verano, a beautiful duet from her larger work Cartography. Shani Collins of the Ron Brown/ Evidence company will premiere a quartet for women and Sarah Vant Hul will explore the choreographic limits of dancing with a stool. Nilaja "Diva" Richardson offers her break dancing and Zoe Klein dances with chocolate in what will likely make for a messy, but fun night.
May 14 and 15, 8pm, $10, students, $8
BRIC Studio, 647 Fulton Street, 718-855-7882, x53, www.briconline.org/bricstudio
Symphony Spaces Dance Sampler
Symphony Space has been presenting their Dance Sampler series for a couple of years now. Several of the choreographers and performers in this years Sampler hail from Brooklyn."I suggest you go see these fellow Brooklynites (and Manhattanites): Chris Elams Misnomer Dance, David Gordon/Pick Up Performance Company, Deborah Zall, Dixie Fun Dance Theatre, Dwight Rhoden/Complexions, Guta Hedewig, Hannah Spongberg, Ivy Baldwin, Jody Oberfelder Dance Projects, Keely Garfield, Mary Seidman and Dancers, Neil Greenberg, Nicholas Leichter Dance, Regina Nejman, and Richard Daniels. Until Brooklyn gets a small to mid-size dance venue of its own, it will be worth the commute even it means going over the bridges and then some.
May 15, 7pm, Symphony Space, Broadway and 95th Street, 212-864-5400,
www.symphonyspace.org
Roxane Butterfly performing.
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Roxane Butterflys IMPROVIZIONs at Joes Pub
Ginger Rogers could do everything Fred Astaire could do but "backwards and in heels," as the famous adage goes. Yet the world of tap dance has long been the domain of the male dancerthink Astaire, Gene Kelly, the Nicholas Brothers, the late and very missed Gregory Hines and the virtuosic Savion Glover, to name only a few. Until quite recently, women tappers have largely been relegated to the side of the spotlight. But now, female hoofers have been carving out their own well-deserved place amongst these male tap greats and are proving that they can tap circles around Ginger Rogers polite t-straps-brand of tapping. One such female performer is Roxane Butterfly, who is the only female tap dancer to win a Bessie (2002). For just one evening, Butterfly will perform her new work Improvizions along with musician Graham Haynes on the cornet at Joes Pub in late May.
May 28, 9:30 pm, Joes Pub at The Public Theater, 425 Lafayette Street, 212-260-2400
www.joespub.com, beauteez.free.fr
Eiko & Koma in TK Photo courtesy of Eiko & Koma.
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Eiko & Komas Tree Song
There are dynamic duos for nearly every performance genre and perhaps it is the team of Eiko and Koma that win out in the dance installation, movement theater category. Eiko and Komas new work, Tree Song, is a site-specific piece set in the graveyard of St. Marks church in the East Village. Known for their mythical, dreamy works in unconventional locales, this duos dancing can be characterized as choreographic haikussublime, simple, yet powerfully moving and insightful. Tree Song explores the bodys relationship to the natural landscape and launches Danspace Projects summer outdoor "graveyard" dance series.
May 27-30, Thurs.-Sun., 8:30 pm, FREE (Following both performances, there will be a reception in the Parish Hall where audience members can also view Komas artwork.)
Danspace Project St. Marks Church in-the-Bowery, 131 East 10th Street
www.eikoandkoma.org
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The Rail invites you to a reading with Jason
Flores-Williams and Brian Carreira, along with musical
guest Steve Strunsky of the Lonesome Prairie Dogs.
Thurs., Sept. 22, 8:30 p.m.
Vox Pop--Flatbush, Brooklyn
www.voxpop.net
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OFF THE RAIL FALL 2005 at the Central Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library - Grand Army Plaza
(718) 230-2100 in the 2nd Floor Auditorium
Tuesday, Sept. 13 from 7 till 9
John Ashbery
Leslie Scalapino
Tuesday, Oct. 18 from 7 till 9
Kenneth Bernard
Lynda Schor
Tuesday, Nov. 15 from 7 till 9
Diane Williams
Christine Schutt
Curated and hosted by the Rail's Fiction Editor Donald Breckenridge
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The Independent Press Association-NY recently honored The Brooklyn Rail with the following awards:
1st place: Best article about Immigrant Issues or Racial Justice--Gabriel Thompson, "One Immigrant's Journey" (September 2004).
1st place: Best article about the Arts*--Amy Zimmer, "The Brownsville Rec. Center" (April 04)
2nd place: Best article about the Arts--Brian Carreira, "Harlem Arts: A Faux Renaissance" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
2nd place: Best editorial or commentary--T. Hamm, "The Issue is Free Speech" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
3rd Place: Best Investigative News Story--Marjory Garrison, "Minimum Matter of Survival" (May 04)
Honorable mention: Best Investigative News Story--Williams Cole, "Housing vs. the RNC" (June 04).
Honorable mention: Best Original Feature--Yvette Walton, "My Life in the NYPD" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
Come to the Brooklyn Waterfront Festival.
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