Members of the Brazilian dance company Grupo Corpo, performing Imã (All photos by José Luiz Pederneiras) |
Dance to blast away the February blahs. Toronto’s Harbourfront Centre is not marketing it as such. But there’s no question that the two hours recently spent in the presence of Brazil’s dynamic Grupo Corpo dance company, a feature of Harbourfront’s ongoing World Stage series at the Fleck Theatre, instantly lifted the spirits. The dancing by the 22-member ensemble is bouncy, bright, infectiously happy – pure liquid sunshine. The dancers themselves appear loose limbed, even rubbery, propelled by a love of dance which makes them a true delight to watch. The movement is mostly the message, and it’s physically daring and expressive, fantastically athletic and sensual all at once. Nothing appears capable of stopping the forward-motion drive. Whether pirouetting, leaping or doing a samba on the spot, the dancers are nothing but remarkable specimens of human achievement: the survival of the fizziest.
If there is a criticism, it’s that the choreography by Rodrigo Pederneiras, with the company since 1978, can appear monotonous: a case of, yes, there really can be too much of a good thing.
Grupo Corpo in Sem Min |
Still, it’s a dance experience not to miss, and largely because it’s so, well, dancey, void of heavy philosophising or deep soul-searching, which in many instances of contemporary dance tends to weigh the movement down making it appear almost secondary to a central idea.
With Grupo Corpo, a family-run enterprise founded by the troupe’s artistic director and lighting and set designer Paulo Pederneiras in Belo Horizonte in 1975, it’s the body that does all the talking. And the subject matter ranges from exploring how bodies move when attracted to each other to how they move when apart.
This, basically, sums up the two-hour program which unfolded in Toronto last week. Imã, the first piece presented, has as its title the Portuguese word for magnet, and the ensuing choreography generally explored various ways bodies can be attached and pulled apart through kinetically charged dance. The music in Imã, by Brazilian band +2, combined bossa nova, 1970s’ Afro and contemporary Japanese music, and was as hip and catchy as it sounds. Sem Min, which translates as "without me," followed the intermission and was more sombre, being an interpretation of Sea of Vigo, a medieval Galician-Portuguese song cycle in which women lament the departure of their lovers and also anticipate their return, a longing expressed as they bathe in the sea.
Even while radiating different moods, both works, and no doubt because made by the same choreographer, shared a dance language in which jack-knifing legs, quick-footed steps, undulating spines and shoulders accenting the beat of the accompanying score. What is communicated is not emotion but vitality, the surge and flow of strength as harnessed by a perfectly syncopated ensemble.
Grupo Corpo in Sem Min |
Grupo Corpo in Imã |
The excitement level increased with each leap skywards, each seemingly effortless kick of the legs sideways to the top of a given dancer’s head. A veritable riot of flying limbs and rocking pelvises made the dancers seem super-charged super-humans inexhaustibly chasing an energy transfer. True, the relentless of the pursuit tended to wear down the spectator wanting, after more than 30 steady minutes of a full-on dance throttle, something by way of respite. But Paulo Pederneiras cleverly kept the eye from wandering by saturating the stage with a shifting kaleidoscope of vibrant colour – red, orange, green – which he also blended to dazzling effect. Zechmeister’s urban costume of jeans and t-shirts were also made to seem endlessly fascinating as a result of the dancers often bounding off into the wings wearing one coloured shirt and then re-bounding wearing another in a strikingly different hue. Again, it was a simple premise, but it worked. The spirit was lifted, soaring with the dancers.
– Deirdre Kelly is a journalist (The Globe and Mail) and internationally recognized dance critic. Her first book, Paris Times Eight, is a national best-seller. Her new book, Ballerina: Sex, Scandal and Suffering Behind the Symbol of Perfection, has just been published by Greystone Books (D&M Books). Visit Ballerina: Sex, Scandal and Suffering Behind the Symbol of Perfection and Paris Times Eight on Facebook, and check out www.deirdrekelly.com for more book updates
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