Jarrett Siddall in Vena Cava (photo by Guntar Kravis) |
The new belongs to a transplanted Frenchman, the Montreal-based choreographer Jean-Sébastien Lourdais, whose work, Etrange, presents the human body through a series of spastic, spit-drooling, limb distorting vignettes designed deliberately to be un-pretty, un-graceful, un-elevating – a dance that debases the human condition as opposed to dignifying it. His approach goes contrary to the initial tenets of modern dance as an art form meant to give divine expression to the human spirit, as described by its early 20th century creator, Isadora Duncan. And precisely for that reason his work, as disturbing as it is, comes across as fresh and exciting. Certainly it is one of the most riveting new dance works out there, as novel (if not as shocking) as Vaslav Nijinsky’s mongoloid movement experiments for Les Ballets Russes. Equally outstanding are the three performers who dance it – Mairi Greig, Yuichiro Inoue and Naishi Wang. You have to see them to experience this as dance on the edge.
Resembling a fragmented Francis Bacon painting coming to life, Etrange debuted with TDT earlier in February at Winchester Street Theatre where the company is headquartered. Artistic director Christopher House is to be applauded for reviving it for the fall season at a bigger venue like Fleck Dance Theatre where people are sure to see it. House has emphasized the bracing newness of Lourdais’ piece by showcasing it along side older works that more traditionally explore such modern dance concepts as flow, space, time and weight as part of their overall artistic presentation. House in particular embraces a more free-flowing style of movement than what Lourdais expresses. Two of his works bookends the nearly 90-minute program, each representing dance as an ennobling pursuit: the body interpreting music.
composer Robert Moran |
The movement flow then quickens and the dancer looks wind-blown across the stage, but artfully so, as if he were a willow tree bending and rustling in time to the tempestuous bursts of pizzicato sound in Moran’s score, excerpted from his Towers of the Moon opera. Vena Cava, the 1998 work which is House’s second contribution to the evening, and the work which concludes the show, also has about it the feeling of rushing energy. Inspired by Moran’s Open Veins, a faster and more kinetically score than that heard in Towers of the Moon, the dance features a multitude of steps performed in rapid-fire bursts by all eight members of the company, plus its two interns. The choreography flows right and it flows left. It runs forward and backward, on a straight line and on the diagonal. Gusty group formations give way to serene, even sculptural solos. The choreography’s propulsive dynamism lends the work an appealing visual texture, abetted here by Lori Tirez Endes’s costumes of black tank tops and red skirts (short for men, long for women) and Snippe’s uncluttered lighting design.
Naishi Wang in Etrange |
Contrasting sharply with all this frenticism and is a revival of work by Patricia Beatty, the veteran choreographer who co-founded TDT together with David Earle and Peter Randazzo in 1968. She represents the program’s tied-and true. Against Sleep, a dance about a woman who at night encounters her demon lover through the erotic mists of a Jungian-tinged dream, debuted along with the company, 44-years ago. House, with Beatty’s permission of course, has remounted it for the fall season and time has not withered its power. Seen in the context of the new, bustling, male created works which dominate Rare Mix, Against Sleep appears as a Canadian modern dance classic, a work worthy of re-examination – all these years and choreographic experiments later. Set to a buzzing, clanging, ringing score of tintinnabulating sound by the late Canadian contemporary composer Ann Southam, Against Sleep unfolds on top of, under and around a set design by Ursula Hanes in which a sky-high central metal pole – held in place by metallic wires anchored to the four corners of the stage – is outfitted with a low-rise bed for the dreamer and an elevated perch for the sexual succubus seeking to dominate her soul. The main prop is a large piece of red cloth which initially covers the sleeper and ultimately enshrouds the demon. In between, the red cloth is used to symbolize the ropes that bind desire to will and also the blood of an imagined virgin sacrifice.
Not surprising, given the subject matter, the work is crafted like an intricate cage of erotic impulses. The two dancers – male and female – prowl and pose and pounce. They fight each other even as they are drawn to each other. But there can only be one victor and the winner of the sexual contest literally occupies the dominant spot on stage. Beatty originally danced the work with her company co-founder Earle. Reviving the roles on opening night were former TDT company member Michael Sean Marye and guest artist Danielle Baskerville, an associate of The Dietrich Group in Toronto. Alana Elmer and Pulga Muchochoma perform the roles on alternate nights.
Artistic Director Christopher House |
Together with Marye, she gave the audience a thrillingly theatrical performance by using dance in something of an old-fashioned way – as an ennobling expression of both body and soul.
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