In the Joffrey tradition: artistic directors of five companies talk about how Robert Joffrey's vision shaped their approach.ON A GOOD DAY, in the right shoes, he stood 5' 6" tall. But when Robert Jeffrey walked into a studio, his immense aura as director, teacher, choreographer, and impresario forced everyone to 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 . The ballet company Noun 1. ballet company - a company that produces ballets troupe, company - organization of performers and associated personnel (especially theatrical); "the traveling company all stayed at the same hotel" that Jeffrey forged, based on an American ideal of energy, invention, popularity, eclecticism eclecticism, in art eclecticism (ĭklĕk`tĭsĭz'əm), art style in which features are borrowed from various styles. , and precision, added highly enriched explosives to the dance boom of the 1960s and '70s. Even his roster of dancers--an "all-star, no star" system--planted the American principle of democracy into dance, allowing each artist the opportunity, to stand separate but equal. And with his Janus-like ability to look forward and backward, Jeffrey rescued choreographic treasures like Massine's Parade and Nijinsky's The Rite of Spring from obscurity, while seeking out new choreographic talent, welcoming rock music and graffiti artists into the imperial world of ballet. Jeffrey died in 1988, but the Jeffrey Ballet, under the direction of co-founder Gerald Arpino Gerald Arpino' (born January 14,1928) is an American dancer, choreographer, and the artistic director and co-founder of The Joffrey Ballet. Born in Staten Island, New York, Gerald Arpino studied ballet with Mary Ann Wells, while stationed with the Coast Guard in Seattle, , lives on in Chicago. And as some of the Jeffrey alumni have become artistic directors, they have borne the influence of Jeffrey's special brand of artistic genius. Five former Jeffrey dancers who now lead nationally recognized companies are taking their Jeffrey experience and implementing it in fresh ways: Dermot Burke of the Dayton Ballet, Jeffrey Graham Hughes of Ohio Ballet, Tom Mossbrucker of 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. , David Palmer David Palmer may refer to:
tr. & intr.v. whit·ened, whit·en·ing, whit·ens To make or become white or whiter, especially by bleaching. whit from Kansas City Kansas City, two adjacent cities of the same name, one (1990 pop. 149,767), seat of Wyandotte co., NE Kansas (inc. 1859), the other (1990 pop. 435,146), Clay, Jackson, and Platte counties, NW Mo. (inc. 1850). Ballet. (The Jeffrey women haven't gone the directorial route, but many, like Diana Cartier and Francesca Gorkle, became excellent teachers or, like Margo Sappington Texas-born Margo Sappington joined the Joffrey Ballet in 1965 -- at the invitation of Robert Joffrey -- where she danced an extensive repertoire of works including ballets by Gerald Arpino. and Ann Marie DeAngelo, choreographers.) When asked to summon memories of Robert Jeffrey, Burke, who performed with the company 1965-1976, pitches phrases like "infectious energy," adding that because of Jeffrey's deep insight, "There was a mystical plan and he knew the ending." Whitener talks about the act of discovery, either through Jeffrey's constant search for untried choreographers like the nascent Twyla Tharp Noun 1. Twyla Tharp - innovative United States dancer and choreographer (born in 1941) Tharp and William Forsythe William Forsythe can be:
v. Third person singular present tense of ply1. n. Plural of ply1. of company class to the carefully staged bows at the end of the evening--made a deep impression on the next generation. "I try to model my behavior on a lot of things about him," says Burke, "like the way he managed to be fastidious fas·tid·i·ous adj. 1. Possessing or displaying careful, meticulous attention to detail. 2. Difficult to please; exacting. 3. Having complex nutritional requirements. Used of microorganisms. while remaining the consummate diplomat." Perhaps more than anything, Jeffrey's uncanny ability to foretell fore·tell tr.v. fore·told , fore·tell·ing, fore·tells To tell of or indicate beforehand; predict. fore·tell which choreographers had the "it" factor has motivated these artistic directors to hunt for unique talent. "Jeffrey was a big believer in first impressions," says Hughes, who danced with him 1971-78. 'Tin a big believer in nay instincts with choreographers. I don't need someone to validate choreographers before I pick them." Hughes took chances on jazz choreographer Leslie Cook and former ballerina Cynthia Gregory Cynthia Gregory is an American ballerina whom Rudolph Nureyev called America's prima ballerina assoluta. She was born in 1946 in Los Angeles. Career Gregory’s parents encouraged her to take up dancing when she was five, hoping exercise would stem a history , who had staged ballets but never choreographed. Mossbrueker used the same gut reaction to commission neophyte ne·o·phyte n. 1. A recent convert to a belief; a proselyte. 2. A beginner or novice: a neophyte at politics. 3. a. Roman Catholic Church A newly ordained priest. choreographer Nicolo Fonte to create a new work. "I put the video in the VCR VCR: see videocassette recorder. VCR in full videocassette recorder Electromechanical device that records, stores on a videotape cassette, and plays back on a TV set recorded images and sound. , and before it was over, I was on the phone calling him," says Mossbrucker. Burke gave first-time opportunities to Septime Webre (now artistic director of The Washington Ballet) and Stephen Mills (artistic director of Ballet Austin). Whitener, a company member 1969-1977, uses Jeffrey's criteria to catch the new wave. "I ask whether this work is going to broaden the dancers' experience, because if it isn't, most likely the audience isn't going to enjoy it much," says Whitener. "I look at the structure of the work," he says, "the integrity of the composition, the musicality, and what the choreographer has to say that is new." Jeffrey didn't create the triple bill--Fokine and Diaghilev had long ago steered away from full-lengths in their programming--but he brought excitement, novelty, sexiness, and diversity to the concept. He knew how to put on a show, and in show biz terms, the Jeffrey Ballet was box office. Mossbrueker thinks that gift for ingenious programming has become somewhat of a lost art. "Joffrey had respect for the audience," says Mossbrucker, a Joffrey dancer 197897. "He never wanted anything too long or off-the-wall that might turn audiences off. So many directors think they have to 'educate' the audience. It's almost like punishment. That was never the case with the Joffrey." Whitener offers an example of a program that Joffrey would assemble. First, start with something classically-based, like Bournonoville's Konservatoriet or Arpino's Kettentanz, to give the audience a familiar ballet context. Then move to something dramatic, like Alley's Feast of Ashes, finishing with a wham-bang, exemplified by the pop appeal of Arpino's signature rock ballet Trinity. Last fall, Whiteners own triple bill consisted of Robbins' The Concert (ice-breaking opener), Kathryn Posin's Stepping Stones (substantive main course), and Petipa's Paquita (fiery crowd-pleaser). As both Palmer and Hughes observed, Joffrey didn't have to love a ballet to put it onstage, nor did he mind an occasional failure, as long as the experiment was exciting. Joffrey's reverence for history (Diaghilev may have been his role model) has probably had a greater impact on Hughes and Whitener than the others, who concentrate on contemporary works. Hughes recently revived Jose Limon's seldom-performed Mazurkas. Whitener curated a program of six solos, including works by Merce Cunningham and Anna Sokolow, that hadn't been performed in decades (see cover story DM, April 2001). He has also reconstructed gems from the Joffrey repertory, like Tharp's As Time Goes By, and would like to mount Kurt Jooss' anti-war essay The Green Table, a 1930s classic that Joffrey once saved from dance purgatory. As for Joffrey's teaching, these five directors unanimously mention the energy and commitment he brought to company class. Classical precision was the prerequisite to leap into other realms of dance. "He concentrated on the preparation and the care you put into your class, like the conscientiousness of the port de bras port de bras n. The technique or practice of positioning and moving the arms in ballet. ," says Hughes. "He helped develop a distinctly American approach." Mossbrucker has rejected some of the fussy exactness that Joffrey required from one show to another. "I encourage the dancers to experiment. I don't want it to be a carbon copy of what I saw last night," says Mossbrucker. And Palmer, who remembers during his 1983-87 tenure a "maybe/possibly not at all" attitude toward second casts, advocates cast changes to allow dancers to grow. Two important aspects of Joffrey's methodology have had little trickle-down effect. Of the troupes mentioned here only the Dayton Ballet has a second company--primarily due to costs. (Joffrey broke ground with his Joffrey II apprentices). And Joffrey's unprolific nature as a choreographer--despite the talent he displayed in ballets like Gamelon, Pas des Deeses, and the psychedelic Astarte--hasn't stopped Palmer, Hughes, and Whitener from avidly pursuing their own choreographic craft. Among the five directors, there is a consensus about the type of dancers they hire, highly aligned with the Joffrey standard: artists who possess a vivid personality (yet fit into an ensemble), solid technique, musicality, versatility, and a sense of fearlessness. The Joffrey legacy has become etched into the collective dance consciousness because, as Whitener says, "He created a great gallery of dance." Palmer adds that, "He was a valiant man who pushed hard and worked through his dreams, enabling a lot of us to strive for something along the same lines." Inevitably some of the genius of Joffrey died with the man. But the future of dance--a timeline that Joffrey understood had to be evolutionary--lives on via the dreams of those who are heirs to the legacy. Joseph Carman Car´man n. 1. A man whose employment is to drive, or to convey goods in, a car or car. danced with the Joffrey Ballet in the 1970s and is the author of Round About the Ballet (Limelight Editions). |
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