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Curtain up.


Choreographers are hard to pin down. They work in the dark, not knowing what they are creating until it's done--or until it's been done for a few years. So it's not always easy to interview them about their work.

William Forsythe William Forsythe can be:
  • William Forsythe (actor) (born 1955)
  • William Forsythe (dancer) (born 1949)
 has developed his own "systems" for generating movement. To read his straightforward interview, you would never guess that his movement vocabulary is one of the most original on the planet and that he has opened the door to a new kind of physicality in ballet. To watch his work--and to dance his work--you have to be hyper alert.

To watch Eiko & Koma perform, you have to be in a completely different mood. Over the last 25 years they have created hypnotically slow works that transport you to a time and place that is somehow preverbal pre·verb·al  
adj.
1. Preceding the verb.

2.
a. Having not yet learned to speak: preverbal children.

b.
, where there is not much difference between animals, plants, and humans. Their performances can put audience members into a meditative state of mind.

Two radically different aesthetics, two major influences on today's international dance scene. What Forsythe and Eiko & Korea have in common is their originality. In our cover story for this Choreography Issue, Forsythe talks about his experimental approach and how much he depends on the dancers. In "Tuning in tuning in,
v process in which a therapeutic touch practitioner centers himself or herself so as to be aligned with or “in tune” with a healing energy “frequency,” so that the patient may choose to join the practitioner (tune
 to the Earth," Deborah Jowitt Deborah Jowitt is an American dance critic, author, and choreographer. Her career in dance began as a performer and choreographer. Beginning in 1967, she has written a weekly dance column for the Village Voice, providing frequent reviews of dance performances in New York City.  talks about Eiko & Koma's relationship to nature, which is at once serene and turbulent.

For those of you just starting out, we offer a full page of Choreography Opportunities. And I will throw my advice into the bargain. Pay heed Verb 1. pay heed - give heed (to); "The children in the audience attended the recital quietly"; "She hung on his every word"; "They attended to everything he said"
advert, give ear, attend, hang
 to the two biggest mistakes a budding choreographer can make: doing too much and doing too little. If you put everything you know into one piece, it will be unshaped, unfocused un·fo·cused also un·fo·cussed  
adj.
1. Not brought into focus: an unfocused lens.

2.
. The audience may be interested at first, but then annoyed by each new step that doesn't cleave cleat, cleave

claw of any cloven-footed animal.
 to a central idea or theme. If you put in too little material and stretch it out over time, there will not be enough sense of discovery to sustain the experience, and the audience will be restless.

But the bigger lesson is: Beware of rules in choreography. The two that I just stated are sometimes broken by the greatest dance artists. Forsythe does "too much," and Eiko & Korea do "too little." But they do something else that is inexplicable, and their performances are terribly satisfying. So maybe the ultimate lesson is this: Do what's right for you. Find your own path.

Wendy Perron Per´ron

n. 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.
, Editor in Chief wperron@dancemagazine.com
COPYRIGHT 2006 Dance Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Perron, Wendy
Publication:Dance Magazine
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2006
Words:409
Previous Article:Attitudes.(Fernando Bujones)(Obituary)
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