Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.City Center New York, New York December 4, 2002-January 5, 2003 Despite Alvin Ailey Noun 1. Alvin Ailey - United States choreographer noted for his use of African elements (born in 1931) Ailey American Dance Theater's announcement of a "Women's Choreography Initiative," the monthlong Christmas season was dominated by men mainly because the Ailey men are dynamos unmatched in the modern dance world for their virtuosity. In part, however, it is because Judith Jamison, AAADT'S artistic director, showcased them. At least one of the season's premieres--Ohad Naharin's Black Milk--was staged for them, while Jawole Willa Jo Zollar's Shelter, once a powerful all-female indictment of homelessness, has been made into a men's-only showstopper showstopper - A hardware or (especially) software bug that makes an implementation effectively unusable; one that absolutely has to be fixed before development can go on. Opposite in connotation from its original theatrical use, which refers to something stunningly *good*. . And, unlike the revival of Elisa Monte's 1979 Treading, the new works commissioned from Lynne Taylor-Corbett and Francesca Harper were weak. Prayers From the Edge, says Taylor-Corbett, was a meditation on Africa and the Middle East in the aftermath of the Six Day War. "Remembering that time," she told Newsday, "it struck me how many conflicts ... are religion based, and how so often people define their god as having nothing to do with anyone else." Little of this comes across. There are two warring clans in Prayers, and a pair of doomed lovers, but why they are doomed (apart from the fact that they're from different clans) and why the clans are at war is never made clear. Stylistically, the choreography is a hodgepodge, with passages of slow, signifying ritual, ballet-style lifts (for the love duets), percussive per·cus·sive adj. Of, relating to, or characterized by percussion. per·cus sive·ly adv. rhythms and big convulsive con·vul·siveadj. 1. Characterized by or having the nature of convulsions. 2. Having or producing convulsions. convulsive pertaining to, characterized by, or of the nature of a convulsion. leaps (for the clans), and karate-style acrobatics acrobatics Art of jumping, tumbling, and balancing. The art is of ancient origin; acrobats performed leaps, somersaults, and vaults at Egyptian and Greek events. Acrobatic feats were featured in the commedia dell'arte theatre in Europe and in jingxi (“Peking (for a woman fighting off a sexual assailant). If the plot derives from West Side Story, the effect recalls The Rite of Spring. Peter Gabriel's world sound (from his album Passion) intensifies the atmosphere of generic primitivism primitivism, in art, the style of works of self-trained artists who develop their talents in a fanciful and fresh manner, as in the paintings of Henri Rousseau and Grandma Moses. , although bowls and other props identify the setting as Africa. Francesca Harper (whose mother, Denise Jefferson, directs The Ailey School) has danced with AAADT AAADT Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater as well as William Forsythe's Ballett Frankfurt, in addition to appearing on Broadway. Apex reflects these influences and also Harper's debts--the blinding light, semi-undress, and semi-intelligible language to Forsythe and Pina Bausch; the strutting and erotic posturing to Broadway; the hip-hop club dancing and political sentiments to AAADT. "Apex," reads the program note, "is dedicated to those who stand up for human dignity and freedom." This is noble stuff, underscored by politically resonant words projected on the cyclorama. But what it has to do with Linda-Denise Fisher-Harrell, a fabulous dominatrix in a black-sequined bra and miniskirt miniskirt skirts hemmed at mid-thigh or higher; heyday of the leg in fashion world (1960s). [Am. Hist.: Sann, 255–263] See : Fads , who rules the stage and its exuberant celebrants of the aerobic body beautiful, is anybody's guess. The action that follows is equally puzzling. A man dies and comes back to life (no Christ symbolism that I could see). A mike descends. Fisher-Harrell mumbles For the record label, see . Mumbles (otherwise, The Mumbles – Welsh Y Mwmbwls) is a large village with adjacent headland stretching into Swansea Bay. It is also a community made up of the Mayals, Newton, Oystermouth, Norton and West Cross electoral wards. "disappeared," "expedited removal," "gang-raped," and various unintelligible UNINTELLIGIBLE. That which cannot be understood. 2. When a law, a contract, or will, is unintelligible, it has no effect whatever. Vide Construction, and the authorities there referred to. phrases. Someone recites the story of Patrick McKenzie, who was refused asylum at JFK airport. The curtain falls as a young man repeats several times (in French), "I come from the Congo." Ohad Naharin's Black Milk also goes nowhere. Commissioned by the Kibbutz kibbutz: see collective farm. kibbutz Israeli communal settlement in which all wealth is held in common and profits are reinvested in the settlement. The first kibbutz was founded in Palestine in 1909; most have since been agricultural. Dance Company in 1984, reworked in 1992, and now set on five of the company's leading men, it opens with the cast smearing mud on their faces, bare chests, and white trousers--for a reason that unfortunately escaped me. By contrast, the constantly changing shapes, feline stretches, and imaginative use of Graham technique in Elisa Monte's Treading remain a source of pleasure. Fun, too, was Louis Falco's Caravan (1976), with its bright hanging panels by William Katz and playful, Tharpian casualness. (A cameo appearance by AAADT veteran Dudley Williams added to the fun.) Ronald K. Brown's Serving Nia (2001) and especially Grace (1999) reveal him to be the most important choreographic presence in the repertoire after Alley himself. Fluent in several African diaspora idioms, Brown uses them to explore the ecstasy of bodies intoxicated in·tox·i·cate v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates v.tr. 1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol. 2. with rhythm. FOR ALL THE TALK ABOUT CELEBRATING THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF WOMEN DANCEMAKERS, THE ALLEY WOMEN ARE TRAPPED IN STEREOTYPES. They are gorgeous, sexy, and tough as nails--amazons with attitude. They use their legs like swords, slashing anything in sight and daring the audience to stop them. They leave vulnerability to the men. The latter, meanwhile, have appropriated the high, even ultra-high extensions of ballet. Gender-bending is all well and good. But in the Ailey company only men have the freedom to explore their feminine side. The women, by contrast, have to be superwomen. |
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