25 to watch: Dance Magazine's annual look at who's new and breaking through in 2006.POWERHOUSE CRICKET Because he jumps higher and quicker than anyone alive, hip hop and underground house dancer James P. Colter is nicknamed "Cricket." A fearless capoeirista, Cricket bounces across the stage, launching his small, compact body into flight and flipping off double-triple somersaults or aerial turns. When grounded, he will do slow motion handstands then slowly leverage down. Or, he might slide across the floor on his head. He seems to spend more time upside down than right side up. Wonderfully intelligent and gentle, Coher is also an admired teacher, intent on spreading the history of hip hop to others. A New Jersey native, Colter moved to Philadelphia to dance with Rennie Harris' Puremovement. Back in the day, Cricket also opened for mainstream recording artists like KRS-One, Deee-Lite, and Will Smith. This year he can be seen in Puremovement's concerts touring across the nation. Recently Cricket founded his own Philadelphia crew and company, Crazy Natives/Soul Motion, dedicated to performance and education. An inspirational dancer and man.--Sally Sommer Sommer is a surname, from the German and Danish word for the season "summer". It may refer to:
COUNTER REVELATION ANUOK VAN DIJK Anouk van Dijk's dancers move as if their limbs were shot out of a cannon. Ask the choreographer how she gets this effect, and she's likely to haul out a notebook filled with diagrams illustrating Countertechnique, the movement system she has developed over the past 20 years. "It uses three-dimensional counter directions within the body to establish a dynamic sense of balance and control," she says, "unlike the traditional approach in modern dance where most movements are controlled from the pelvis." This month the Netherlands-based anoukvandijk dc is in residence at the Maggie Allesee National Center far Choreography in Tallahassee to make a DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. of Countertechnique principles. But the best demonstration is in watching the dancers move. They whip, spin, lunge, and fall flat on their faces. As it looks, van Dijk assures us that her unique approach actually reduces the incidence of injury. See the company at MASS MoCA in Jan., Tallahassee and Seattle's Velocity Dance in Feb., and Danspace Project in New York in October. --Karen Hilderbrand NIGHT LIGHT CAITLIN VALENTINE When Caitlin Valentine performs, she glows. With her seemingly effortless technique and beautifully proportioned body, Valentine exudes joy onstage. She began training in tap, jazz, ballet, and musical theater in New Jersey, but switched her focus solely to ballet when she moved to Florida at age 11, dancing at Orlando Ballet's school and joining the company at age 16. "Orlando Ballet is like a family," she says. "I love being here. Being 19 and in a bigger company I wouldn't have these opportunities." She revealed her expressive talents as Guinevere in Samantha Duster's Camelot last spring, and credits Dunster, school director Peter Stark, and the late company artistic director Fernando Bujones for her accomplishments. "Performing is what I love. I give it everything and I hope that shows." Catch her in May at Orlando's Bob Carr Performing Arts Centre The Bob Carr Performing Arts Centre is a major performing arts auditorium in Orlando, Florida and seats 2,518. It is part of the larger Orlando Centroplex organization which manages several facilities. when the company present Bujones' version of Raymonda: The Medieval Times Ballet.--Kate Mattingly FLASHBACK TO HEROISM KURT DOUGLAS Kurt Douglas performs the heroic Limon repertoire with vibrancy, attack, and inner joy. Now in his fifth year with the Limon Dance Company, he attributes his success in such pieces as Psalm and A Choreographic Offering to the powerful, dramatic content of Limon's work. "It's about being artistically vulnerable," Douglas says. "1 love to recreate Limon's row, masculine emotions." After studying the Graham technique at New York City's LaGuardia High School of Performing Arts The High School of Performing Arts, more formally known as The School of Performing Arts: A Division of the Fiorello H La Guardia High School of Music and the Arts, informally known as "PA", was a public alternative high school in New York, New York, USA that existed from 1948 , Douglas headed to the Boston Conservatory of Music to train with former Limon dancer Jennifer Scanlon. After graduating with flying colors, he was offered a contract by the artistic director of the Limon Company, Carla Maxwell. The following year he received the Princess Grace Award for outstanding performer, and by 2003, he was dancing lead roles. This year catch him in the monumental Limon revival Missa Brevis in March in Los Angeles, or in May at the Virginia Arts Festival.--Robert Tracy LUSH HYBRID TANIA
With an alluring stage presence and a prodigious stash stash Drug slang noun A place where illicit drugs are hidden of movement ideas, Tania Isaac is spreading her special magic on Philadelphia stages and beyond. A native of St. Lucia, West Indies, Isaac balances hot movements and cool attitudes to create a delicious concoction of Caribbean dance forms (calypso, reggae, and the spoken word--so good we can almost taste it. Isaac rocked Philly in 2004 with home is where i am, an evening length, multimedia piece on immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. . Fusing choreography with personal documentary and social commentary, her stage picture is intelligent, voluptuous, witty, and political, all in the same breath. The women in Isaac's muticultural ensemble perform sensually and sensuously without becoming pornographic objects. A veteran of Urban Bush Women and Rennie Harris Puremovement, Isaac and her eponymous company will be in residence at the Bates Bates , Katherine Lee 1859-1929. American educator and writer best known for her poem "America the Beautiful," written in 1893 and revised in 1904 and 1911. Dance Festival in July performing Standpipe standpipe, tank or pipe for holding water in an elevated position to create pressure in a water supply system. For a tall building, where the pressure from the mains at street level is insufficient to raise the water to the upper floors, water is pumped up to the , her new work.--Brenda Dixon Gottschild ALWAYS SEARCHING AESHA AESHA Asociacion Española del Sindrome de la Hemiplejia Alternante ASH When Aesha Ash was in the corps of New York City Ballet New York City Ballet, one of the foremost American dance companies of the 20th cent. It was founded by Lincoln Kirstein and George Balanchine as the Ballet Society in 1946. , she had a piquant quality and invigorating in·vig·or·ate tr.v. in·vig·or·at·ed, in·vig·or·at·ing, in·vig·or·ates To impart vigor, strength, or vitality to; animate: "A few whiffs of the raw, strong scent of phlox invigorated her" energy that made some observers wonder when she would be named soloist. Another person who noticed was Albert Evans, the NYCB NYCB New York City Ballet NYCB New York Community Bank principal who cast her as the lead in his edgy, design-conscious Haiku haiku (hī`k ), an unrhymed Japanese poem recording the essence of a moment keenly perceived, in which nature is linked to human nature. in 2002. "His piece reawakened something inside of me," Ash said recently. Whatever that something was, she went in search for more of it in Europe and danced with Bejart's Ballet Lausanne for two years. Now she's back, and Alonzo King's got her. Last fall on a break from rehearsals for his San Francisco-based LINES Ballet, she said, "Alonzo believes in searching out the artist within you. He makes me do a lot of self-exploration. It's not only physical work but also a ton of mental work." With Ash's terrific dancing and King's global-inspired choreography, this could be a match made in heaven. --Wendy Perron Per´ronn. 1. (Arch.) An out-of-door flight of steps, as in a garden, leading to a terrace or to an upper story; - usually applied to mediævel or later structures of some architectural pretensions. MERCURY RISING MA CONG A quicksilver light fills the stage when Ma Cong dances. Grounded in a visceral love of moving, he exudes joy in the lift-off and exhilaration as he flashes through the air. Formerly with the National Ballet of China The National Ballet of China (NBC), or the Central Ballet Troupe as known in China, headquartered in Beijing, was founded on December 31, 1959, and is the only national ballet troupe of the country. , Cong is expanding his artistry as both principal dancer and emerging choreographer with Tulsa Ballet. His passion for moving gave rise to his first full work last year. It wove influences ranging from folk and classical forms to Kylian and Duato into a richly varied vocabulary. Cong recently premiered a second work and appeared as guest dancer with the Teatra del Maggio Musicale mu·si·cale n. A program of music performed at a party or social gathering. [French, from (soirée) musicale, musical (evening), feminine of musical, from musique, Florentino (the Florence Opera House) and the Teatro Massimo in Palermo. As Tulsa Ballet's sole male principal dancer, Cong performs in February and again in April at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center The Tulsa Performing Arts Center is a performing arts venue in the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma. It houses six performance halls and four theaters, including the 2,365-seat Chapman Music Hall. The building occupies half a city block in downtown Tulsa. .--Cynthia Perry SHORT STORIES, TANGO STYLE: NAVARRETE X KAJIYAMA When Mexican-born Jose Navarrete and Japanese-American Debby Kajiyama started working together in 2001, they explored the intersection of their individual cultures. But they really hit common ground when they discovered a mutual passion--tango. The two petite dancers have become formidable tangueros who are now exploring the theatrical potential of this social dance in the Bay Area. Just as Astor Piazzola, whose music they often use, pushed tango's resonance into other realms, Navarrete and Kajiyama dig into the tension between constraint and freedom. They stretch the duo form and dip into the cauldron of tango's underbelly. What they have come up with is a series of pungent little essays--some of them light, some of them dark, all of them crisply designed and excellently performed. Navarrete x Kajiyama Dance Theater will appear May 17-June 4 at the 2006 San Francisco International Arts Festival, which will focus on Latino culture.--Rita Feliciano DANCER TURNING CHOREOGRAPHER EDWARD LIANG When Peter Boal asked New York City Ballet principal Wendy Whelan who she'd like to choreograph a duet for them to dance in Boal's chamber company, Whelan chose Edward Liang, the Taiwan-born City Ballet soloist. Liang's poetic pas de deux pas de deux (French; “step for two”) Dance for two performers. A characteristic part of classical ballet, it includes an adagio, or slow dance, by the ballerina and her partner; solo variations by the male dancer and then the ballerina; and a coda, or , Distant Cries, was so successful that it was picked up by City Ballet for their spring gala. Elegant, long-limbed, and precise, Liang has a keen feeling for contemporary work as both dancer and choreographer. He was terrific in Fosse, whipping off strings of pirouettes that wowed the Broadway audience. His multimedia group dance, This Mortal Coil For other uses, see Mortal coil (disambiguation). This Mortal Coil was a musical dream pop project of Ivo Watts-Russell, founder of the British 4AD Records label. The project brought together key 4AD artists, as well as others not signed to the label, under an umbrella name: , made for the launch of the Cedar Lake Ensemble last fall (see "New York Notebook," October), was fast-moving and dramatic with the added dimension of an anguished solo figure. A recent back injury has kept Liang off the stage but hasn't slowed down his creative pace. This month he premieres a ballet for Aspen Santa Fe Ballet Aspen Santa Fe Ballet has established itself as one of America's leading contemporary dance companies. Its eleven classically trained dancers, perform an eclectic repertoire by some of the world’s foremost choreographers. , set to music by Philip Glass.--Amanda Smith FIFTH TIME'S A CHARM BALLET PACIFICA What do Eugene Loring, and the Joffrey Ballet have in common? They all tried and failed to sustain a ballet in Los Angeles. Will Ethan Stiefel's Ballet Pacifica be any different? "I'm involving great people at right time," says Stiefel (left), who is known in ballet circles as a savvy businessman. The principal dancer at American Ballet Theatre American Ballet Theatre, one of the foremost international dance companies of the 20th cent. It was founded in 1937 as the Mordkin Ballet and reorganized as the Ballet Theatre in 1940 under the direction of Lucia Chase and Rich Pleasant. assumed artistic directorship of the Orange County company last November and immediately surrounded himself with a first-rate crew: Amanda McKerrow as ballet mistress (right), John Gardner as artistic associate (center), Lorin Johnson as director of the school, and Tom Gulick as executive director. After almost two years of fundraising and planning, the 25-member troupe will have its premiere in October. Stiefel plans to program works by Tharp, Lubovitch, Balanchine, Ashton, and Robbins as well as Finnish choreographer Nils Christe and Dutchman Didy Veldman. "I feel ready," says Stiefel. Let's hope he is. Los Angeles is still the only major city the U.S. Without a ballet company, and no one wants it to remain that way.--Kate Lydon CIRQUE DE BALLET JOSIE WALSH Fusing aerial acrobatics and gymnastics with edgy pointe work best described as "extreme ballet," Los Angeles-based artistic director/choreographer Josie Walsh creates mini-Vegas-like extravaganzas with her six-year-old Myo Dance Company. A former Joffrey Ballet and Zurich Ballet dancer, Walsh has an additional weapon in her creative arsenal: Husband Paul Rivera fronts an industrial rock band, Kyo, grinding out guitar licks perched on a pair of stilts This article is about the poles. For the type of bird, see stilt. For other uses, see Stilts (disambiguation). Stilts are poles, posts or pillars used to allow a person or structure to stand at a certain distance above the ground. . This spring in Hollywood, her 20-member troupe performs The Garden of Reason, a "non-linear journey through the mind." Walsh, who also teaches and is choreographing Tinker Bell for Disney, says, "We're dance-based but use circus arts to enhance choreographic opportunities--and to defy gravity."--Victoria Looseleaf MOON GODDESS CARLA KORBES Brazilian-born Carlo Korbes thrilled New York City Ballet audiences when she leaped into the spotlight soon after joining the company's corps de ballet corps de bal·let n. The dancers in a ballet troupe who perform as a group. [French : corps, corps + de, of + ballet, ballet. in 2000. Luminously beautiful, she was playful and musical as Titania in A Midsummer Night's Dream A Midsummer Night's Dream is a romantic comedy by William Shakespeare written sometime in the 1590s. It portrays the adventures of four young Athenian lovers and a group of amateur actors, their interactions with the Duke and Duchess of Athens, Theseus and Hippolyta, and , and articulate and dramatic in Tschaikovsky Suite No. 3. She looked like she could do no wrong. But a series of injuries and illnesses kept Korbes offstage for large chunks of time, and it was only last season when--promoted to soloist--she began to shine anew. Then she announced she was moving--to Pacific Northwest Ballet The Pacific Northwest Ballet is a ballet company and based in Seattle, Washington in the United States. Founded in 1972 as part of the Seattle Opera and named the Pacific Northwest Dance Association, it broke away from the Opera in 1977 and took its current name in 1978. , along with her mentor Peter Boal, who had been responsible for bringing her to the School of American Ballet The School of American Ballet is located in New York City, in Lincoln Center. It is considered one of the most prestigious and notable ballet schools in the United States and teaches some of the most talented young dancers in the country. . It's Boal and Seattle's gain. She has already brought her stylistic elegance and full-bodied sensuality into the stark geometry of Forsythe's Artifact II. Look out for her in PNB's new staging of Balanchine's Jewels in June.--Roslyn Sulcas CRAZY LEGS LISA The first personal computer to include integrated software and use a graphical interface. Modeled after the Xerox Star and introduced in 1983 by Apple, it was ahead of its time, but never caught on due to its $10,000 price and slow speed. BENSON At the Jazz Dance World Congress in Chicago last August, Odyssey Dance Theatre's Lisa. Benson revealed an unlimited supply of high-tech energy. In company director Derryl Yeager's modern jazz duet Motif, Benson rocked the house with her meticulous pointe work, warm presence, and insanely supple body. The young audience screamed with delight each time her penche stretched beyond the beyond. Leaving Salt Lake City at 16 for opportunities in California, she returned with a string of awards to study as a ballet major in the dance program at the University of Utah The University of Utah (also The U or the U of U or the UU), located in Salt Lake City, is the flagship public research university in the state of Utah, and one of 10 institutions that make up the Utah System of Higher Education. . But when ODT See SCO Open Desktop. ODT - Open Desktop , based in Salt Lake City, offered the chance to explore everything from ballet to hip hop, plus a European tour and four annual home seasons, Benson jumped. Excited to work with new associate artistic director Bonnie Story, whose extensive film and video experience is sure to bring a new edge, Benson remarked, "How can you not love the challenges at ODT?"--KATHY ADAMS LIGHTS, CAMERA, DANCE! DANCE CAMERA WEST In Los Angeles, a city notorious for being unfriendly to homegrown dance, Dance Camera West Film Festival is all about being inclusive: documentaries, Hollywood classics, site-specific performance combined with video and experimental non-narrative films--DCW shows it all each June. Screenings take place at venues across the sprawling megalopolis megalopolis (mĕgəlŏp`lĭs) [Gr.,=great city], a group of densely populated metropolitan areas that combine to form an urban complex. at museums, an outdoor plaza, a hillside park, and at landmark movie palaces. Different crowds turn up each night, and it's not dance fans only, says co-director Lynette Kessler. The festival has grown from 2002's two nights of movies to last year's 45 films at six sites, attracting 3,000 people. For the first time, DCW DCW Digital Chart of the World DCW Delhi Commission for Women DCW DFAS Corporate Warehouse DCW Domestic Cold Water DCW Dynamic Championship Wrestling DCW Distributed Collaborative Work DCW Data Control Words DCW Diamond Championship Wrestling showed films in the fall, and they will show winning entries from the American Choreography Awards next summer. Co-director Kelly Hargraves plans to offer workshops on how choreographers can transform performance for the camera.--LAURA BLEIBERG ELOQUENT EROTICISM HEE HEE Higher Education Establishments SEO (Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Optimizer) See search engine optimization. Casual. Sexy. Lithe. When Hee Sea glided through Morning After at American Ballet Theatre's Studio Company gala this spring, she brought a sleek sensuality to Brian Reeder's playful look at post-coital mores. Sea, 19, now an ABT ABT About ABT Abteilung (German: Department) ABT Abbott Laboratories (stock symbol) ABT American Ballet Theatre ABT Associação Brasileira de Telemarketing ABT Abort ABT Availability Based Tariff apprentice, seems to have better credentials for a dewy dew·y adj. dew·i·er, dew·i·est 1. Moist with or as if with dew: dewy grass in early morning. 2. Accompanied by dew: a dewy morning. 3. Aurora than a femme fatale. She started ballet at 11 in her native Seoul, studied at Washington, D.C.'s Kirov Academy, and in 2003 wan both the Prix de Lausanne The Prix de Lausanne is arguably the world's most famous international competition for young dancers and has launched the careers of some of the best known ballet dancers in the past 30 years. and the top prize at Youth America Grand Prix, which gained her a place in ABT's Studio Company. "She has refinement and sensuality," says artistic associate Clinton Luckett. "And she makes extraordinarily beautiful classical shapes." While Sea feels her technique lags--'I can't do five pirouettes'--her interest lies more in developing artistic depth. "When you walk upstage, you need to be as expressive with your back as you are with your face," she says. "I'm a dancer trying to put a face on my back."--Hanna Rubin ACCIDENTAL JULIET MARIKO KIDA KIDA Korea Institute for Defense Analyses When Marika Kida joined Les Grands Ballets Canadiens Les Grands Ballets Canadiens is a Canadian ballet company based in Montreal, Quebec. It was founded in 1957 by Ludmilla Chiriaeff. In 2000, Gradimir Pankov became Artistic Director. External links
star-crossed lovers die as teenagers. [Br. Lit.: Romeo and Juliet] See : Death, Premature Romeo and Juliet archetypal star-crossed lovers. [Br. Lit. , passionately moving through the work's classical steps and contemporary choreography with equal finesse. And she was only a member of the corps. "I should have been nervous," Kida says quietly. Originally chosen as an understudy for the part, she was practicing off in a corner when artistic director Gradimir Pankov saw her and decided she should perform Juliet. "She is a jewel," says Pankov. "Such a small body but she moves large. So much harmony there." Kida, 22, studied at the San Francisco Ballet San Francisco Ballet, or SFB, is a San Francisco, USA based ballet company, founded in 1933 as part of San Francisco Opera Ballet. The company is currently based in the War Memorial Opera House, where it is directed by Helgi Tomasson. School on a Prix de Lausanne scholarship and danced with Alberta Ballet for two years before joining Les Grands in 2004. Now a demi-soloist, versatile Kida looks forward to tackling her company's new cutting-edge repertoire.--Kena Herod ROMANTIC ERA BALLERINA LETICIA OLIVEIRA With her deep-set dark eyes and flair for emotional depth, Houston Ballet's first soloist Leticia Oliveira recalls ballerinas of the past. With a rare authenticity and vintage charm, she transported audiences back to 1940s Russia in the "Serenade" sala of Serge Lifar's Suite en Blanc. She embodied Giselle's frail character and her ghostly incarnation as a Will. At the age of 18, Oliveira left her homeland of Brazil, where-danced with Municipal Theater of Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r , to pursue more performing opportunities. Before landing in Houston in 2001, she danced with the Fernando Bujones Dance Company and the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago. Promoted to first soloist in 2004, she's been on the rise ever since. "I love story ballets," claimed Oliveira as she prepared to dance Tatiana in Cranko's Onegin, her new favorite role. This February she will have her first chance to dance in Stanton Welch's new Swan Lake, and later on in the season, Don Quixote.--Nancy Wozny SOLAR ENERGY ISAAC SPENCER Hubbard Street Dance Chicago's Isaac Spencer has an electric presence onstage. With an intense internal focus, he moves as if some perfectly coiled spring had just been released in him. In works like Nacho Duato's Gnawa and William Forsythe's Enemy in the Figure, his energy radiates into space, unforced yet thrilling, beautifully controlled yet a little wild. Small, lean and boyish, Spencer, 23, has the looks of a bohemian Tom Sawyer. He grew up in Worcester, MA, began dance classes at 9, attended Walnut Hill (a private performing arts high school), and graduated from Juilliard in 2004. He immediately joined Hubbard Street 2 and a month later was invited into the main company. Spencer is self-critical about his ballet technique, but says, "One of the things I've learned is to embrace what you do have." Catch him during Hubbard Street's national tour throughout February, or during the company's spring season, March 22-April 9 at Chicago's Harris Theater far Music and Dance.--Hedy Weiss BRAIN CHILD JONAH BOKAER Knocking the socks off Merce Cunningham audiences around the globe would be an achievement for any young dancer. But Jonah Bokaer has also begun a body of solo choreography that is wowing his peers. After growing up in Ithaca, New York
For other places or objects named Ithaca, see Ithaca (disambiguation). , Bokaer attended the North Carolina School of the Arts The North Carolina School of the Arts is a well known arts conservatory in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. It was the first state-supported, residential school of its kind in the nation. and in 2000 became the youngest dancer to ever be accepted into the Merce Cunningham Dance Company. Bokaer finds spontaneity in the company's repertoire, bringing the familiar shapes alive with arc and undertow. In his own work, humanity and fluidity are matched by intellectual inquiry. In his recent solo, Nudedescendance, Duchamp's historic painting, "Nude Descending a Staircase," collides with computer technology. Bokaer's last task in the piece is to drink a bottle of water while bumping down a ladder, bum to rung, nude. Look for a new work in the Family Matters series at Dance Theater Workshop Dance Theater Workshop is a New York City performance space and service organization for dance companies. Located on West 19th Street in the Chelsea section of Manhattan, DTW was founded in 1965 by Jeff Duncan, Art Bauman and Jack Moore as a choreographers' collective. in January.--Chris Dohse BACK ON TRACK MISA KURANAGA Whether she's whipping through a Petipa variation or gliding softly in a premiere by Lucinda Childs, Misa MISA Media Institute of Southern Africa MISA Municipal Information Systems Association MISA Management Information Systems Association MISA Maintenance of Internal Security Act MISA Media Institute of South Africa Kuranoga radiates strength, musicality, and a meticulous sense of epaulement. Shy in speech but brave in her actions--and onstage--the Japanese ballerina had actually contemplated quitting dance at age 17. But in 2001 she had good luck at the most prestigious European ballet competition. "The Prix de Lausanne saved my life," she says with a laugh. "It gave me a scholarship to San Francisco Ballet School, and the same year I won a gold medal at the 9th Moscow Competition." Boston Ballet artistic director Mikko Nissinen noticed her immediately at the Monaco Dance Forum, where she had taken class, and offered her a contract in BB's corps without a formal audition. He cast her as Amour in Don Quixote and then promoted her to second soloist. This March she'll dance in an energetic premiere by Helen Pickett, and in May, she performs a lead in Balanchine's classic Serenade, which she says is "a dream come true."--Theodore Bale THE NON-CHOREOGRAPHER MIGUEL GUTIERREZ Miguel Gutierrez is not a choreographer. This Brooklyn-based "dance artist," as he prefers to be called, often collaborates with media artists and musicians so that movement is only one part of his artistic endeavors. In damnation road (2004), his company, called Miguel Gutierrez and the Powerful People, presented a searing sear 1 v. seared, sear·ing, sears v.tr. 1. To char, scorch, or burn the surface of with or as if with a hot instrument. See Synonyms at burn1. 2. , visceral portrait of terror incarnate. Frenetic floor work, slicing arms, and furtive running passages were staged amidst a film of a burning tractor-trailer, blinding white lights, and a bleating bleat n. 1. a. The characteristic cry of a goat or sheep. b. A sound similar to this cry. 2. A whining, feeble complaint. v. bleat·ed, bleat·ing, bleats v. soundscape sound·scape n. An atmosphere or environment created by or with sound: the raucous soundscape of a city street; a play with a haunting soundscape. . It was a caustic, apocalyptic performance experience. This year finds Gutierrez, who has danced with Joe Goode and John Jasperse, in a "back to basics" mood. After the New York premiere last month he brings new pieces to DiverseWorks in Houston, TX (March 3-4) including the solo Retrospective Exhibitionist exhibitionist /ex·hi·bi·tion·ist/ (ek?si-bish´in-ist) a person who indulges in exhibitionism. exhibitionist An exhibitor exhibiting exhibitionism, see there , which he says examines his own vulnerability as a performer. Choreographer or dance artist--whatever his title, Gutierrez's messages are loud and clear.--Vanessa Manko THE NEXT RUSSIAN LEGEND YEVGENIA OBRAZTSOVA During the Kirov Ballet's summer season in London, 21-year-old Yevgenia Obraztsova's evocative Juliet had British balletomanes comparing her to that other legendary Russian, Galina Ulanova. From her very first moment onstage, the audience was ensnared by her spontaneity; her beautiful, expressive face and long slim limbs; her fleet footwork, thistledown-soft technique, and flowing lyricism; and her spirited and dramatic elucidation of Shakespeare's doomed heroine. Later, in Forsythe's Approximate Sonata her delicate demeanor gave way to contemporary off-balances and a tough physicality. Obraztsova joined the Kirov in 2002 and won the gold medal at the last Moscow International Ballet Competition. She recently appeared as an actress-dancer in the French film, Les Poupees Russes, receiving excellent reviews. Under the tutelage of former Kirov ballerina Ninel Kurgapkina, Obraztsova should continue to polish and refine her performances, and we can expect to hear a lot more about her in the years ahead.--Margaret Willis UNSTOPPABLE AMAR RAMASAR Unleashing a torrent of frenzied movement in Peter Martins' The Infernal Machine, snapping fingers and hips in Jerome Robbins' Fancy Free, or dancing with classical clarity in Agon, New York City Ballet corps member Amar Ramasar has consistently stood out from the crowd since joining the company in 2001. Born in the Bronx to a Trinidadian father and Puerto Rican mother, Ramasar started ballet at 14 because it "looked challenging." He has a beautiful line, an effortless jump, and an instinctive musicality. But you don't watch Ramasar for his technique, which he uses simply as an underpinning for his eloquent, expressive dancing and his engaging, ebulliant personality. He knows how to project vulnerability and compassion onstage--and deadpan humor too. These gifts should bring a great deal to New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. Ballet-goers in 2006. --Roslyn Sulcas THEY COME AS A PACKAGE THIS WOMAN'S WORK Heads up presenters! Co-founders Princess Mhoon-Cooper and Bridget Moore with Hope Boykin, Camille Brown, Shani Nwando, Ikerioha Collins, and Ursula Payne, have joined together under the banner "This Woman's Work" (TWW TWW The West Wing (TV show) TWW The Wind Waker (Nintendo Zelda video game) TWW Teaming with Wildlife TWW Two-Week Wait TWW The War Within (Transformers comics) ) and have produced two sold-out events so far. Admittedly, they had loads of help from elders like Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, but it took plenty of their own hard work. From management to public relations, designing to fundraising, they have built their own collective to showcase their individual choreography. Although they come from the companies of Ronald K. Brown, Rennie Harris, and Alvin Ailey, and are informed by icons Pearl Primus and Katherine Dunham, the end product is all theirs. Amidst a myriad of young dancemakers in New York, these emerging black women are intent on getting their work out--on their own terms. TWW will perform in Washington, D.C., at Howard University Feb. 3-4. --Charmaine Patricia Warren SPLASHING COLORS KAZU KUMAGAI Tapper Kazu Kumagai dances like the American Abstract Expressionist Jackson Pollock painted. Intense and focused, Kumagai pays no attention to his upper body or funky clothes. Straddling his legs out, then bringing them in, he riffs backwards as happily as rifting forward. He will crisscross his own tracks in tight patterns, building dense rhythmic accumulations, playing with the music. Then he stops, listens, and splatters down delicate taps like colorful paint dribbles. Kumagai started tapping at 15 in Japan, then came to the United States to work with excellent teachers Barbara Duffy and Ted Levy. Since 1997 he has earned respect as an international leader in tap and a gifted recipient of the American tap legacy. Dancers like Kumagai are living proof that tap dancing is one of our greatest exports of the 21st century. Watch an elegant 11-second Parco ad of Kumagai dancing on Plexiglass at www.plusetplus.com.--Sally Sommer |
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