(photo by Bill H Photography) |
The Motown veined riches of two black radio stations have been mined to form the hip-swaying, toe-tapping backdrop to a piece that is semi-autobiographical in nature. Considered one of dance’s hottest new talents, a status confirmed by Abraham having recently received a prestigious MacArthur (a.k.a.Genius Grant) Fellowship, the 35-year old Afro-American choreographer listened to those AM/FM stations in his native Pittsburgh until they were suddenly yanked off the air in 2009. Around the same time, his father lost his ability to speak, a victim of Alzheimer’s and aphasia disease. The Radio Show, as performed by the seven high-octane members of the New York-based Abraham.In.Motion dance company, is Abraham’s bracingly contemporary mediation on love and loss – one cultural, the other personal – and it is a kick to the head and heart.
Combining the spontaneity and personal expressiveness of hip hop and other street dance vernaculars with the precision of ballet and the exuberance of disco and Afro-accented modern dance, the 69-minute piece is dance in the here and now, a post-modern hybrid. Its many splendoured thangs run a wide gamut. Inspired by the stripped down aesthetic of Merce Cunningham and the multimedia style of Ralph Lemon, Abraham, a former dancer with Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company and David Dorfman Dance, who today creates for Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in addition to his own company, takes an inclusive approach to dance making. Everything that illuminates human experience is allowed in, the human condition, the highs and the lows.
(photo by Bill H Photography) |
That dancer who plays Abraham’s father begins the evening in the audience, meeting and greeting people as they head to their seats. When the initial strains of Motown fill the auditorium, he starts dancing joyously, propelled in a pure way by the beat of the music, inviting audience members to join him in dancing in the aisles. There are no real takers. But this doesn’t mean the audience isn’t instantly hooked. As the dance continues, the tempo fluctuates. There’s a real soulful moment when a solo dancer moves elegiacally to Miss Aretha Franklin, as the radio host introduces the First Lady of Soul, singing, "Mary Don’t You Weep." Dan Scully’s lighting design darkens at this point. Elsewhere it veers between dance hall and theatre stage, a row of bright coloured lights illuminating the action from behind. Sometimes the lighting serves also to create intimate spaces on the stage. Coffin-like rectangles of white light hold characters sliding down into grief. A circle of light is both an exhibitionist’s arena and the thin edge on which a man in decline attempts to keep his balance, but without success. Sarah Cubbage’s costume of high-waisted, wide-leg disco-era pants combined with tops with giant holes cut into their backs underline the idea that in The Radio Show the dial of life can shift on a whim, turning dancing dandies into drooling human tragedies. But still the music plays on. The women with their hands on their hips, gloriously vamping and snapping gum, strike a defiant pose in the face of all that life wants to dish at them, saying, as they do, funk it.
– 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, is 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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