Cloud Gate Dance Theatre.The program note for Nine Songs, Lin Hwai-min's two-act spectacle of dance theater The German Tanztheater ("dance theatre") grew out of German expressionist dance. Its most influential performers are Pina Bausch and Susanne Linke. , tells us that in Chinese "nine" means "many" rather than a specific number. Many, many things happen in Lin's dance drama, which calls on the methods of both contemporary modern dance and ancient Chinese dance to present a visual poem telling of benign and evil forces, old and new. So many, in fact, that as the two-hour-or-so production proceeded, I began to wonder about the Chinese for kitchen sink." The episodic activity of Nine Songs, inspired in part by the 2000-year-old poetry of Qu Yuang, takes place on a stage decorated by Ming Cho Lee
Ming Cho Lee (born 1930, Shanghai, China) is a prolific American theatrical set designer and a longtime professor at the Yale School of Drama. . Flats painted with gigantic lotuses frame the space like a movable folding screen; a simulated lotus pond (real water and fake flora) edges the front of the stage. The cast of characters runs a wide gamut from a bicycle-riding businessman to a shrouded goddess bearing a flowering staff. The music comes from multiple Asian sources - Tibet, India, Japan, and Taiwan. Lin's choreographic mentors appear to be Martha Graham, Pina Bausch, Maurice Bejart, and Moses Pendleton, as well as, I suppose, Chinese theater individuals unfamiliar to me. The first half of his spectacle means to proceed from morning to night; the second, through the four seasons. Little of this happens with notable finesse. What you might expect to evolve like the passing light of day comes and goes in blocklike segments. The action of the first half animates opaquely ritualistic rit·u·al·is·tic adj. 1. Relating to ritual or ritualism. 2. Advocating or practicing ritual. rit tableaux with declamatory moves of a numbing sameness. The second half, not much more lucid as drama, has a little more variety. Something of a coup de theatre coup de thé·â·tre n. pl. coups de théâtre 1. A sudden dramatic turn of events in a play. 2. An unexpected and sensational event, especially one that reverses or negates a prevailing situation. surfaces when Wang Chiang-mei as the Goddess of the Xiang River dominates the stage trailing a seemingly endless white veil, manipulated and arranged at one point like Robert Smithson's postmodern earth work called Spiral Jetty. Dancers portraying past and recent victims of brutal political suppression also enter the mix. A denouement de·noue·ment also dé·noue·ment n. 1. a. The final resolution or clarification of a dramatic or narrative plot. b. called Honoring the Dead' comes in the form of a tediously protracted pro·tract tr.v. pro·tract·ed, pro·tract·ing, pro·tracts 1. To draw out or lengthen in time; prolong: disputants who needlessly protracted the negotiations. 2. procession with votive candles, recycling Gerald Arpino's Trinity with Bejart's Messe pour le temps present. The flickering flames are eventually amassed into a golden, snaking road that appears to pierce the infinity of starlit star·lit adj. Illuminated by starlight. starlit Adjective lit by starlight Adj. 1. outer space. The winding route struck me as a monument to the program's nebulous long haul. |
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