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Lighting the way.


In Jennifer Tipton's hands, light is a living thing. Her designs have illuminated, both physically and metaphorically, the works of Paul Taylor

For other people named Paul Taylor, see Paul Taylor (disambiguation).
Paul Taylor (born July 29, 1930) is one of the foremost American choreographers of the 20th century.
, Trisha Brown Trisha Brown (25 November 1936, Aberdeen, Washington, U.S.) is a postmodernist American choreographer and dancer.

Brown was born in Aberdeen, Washington, and received a B.A. degree in dance from Mills College in 1958. Brown later received a D.F.A. from Bates College in 2000.
, Twyla Tharp Noun 1. Twyla Tharp - innovative United States dancer and choreographer (born in 1941)
Tharp
, Jerome Robbins Noun 1. Jerome Robbins - United States choreographer who brought human emotion to classical ballet and spirited reality to Broadway musicals (1918-1998)
Robbins
, Antony Tudor, Jiri Kylian, and most recently, Christopher Wheeldon. Her range is extraordinary, from lighting the striped figures who dance through smoke in Tharp's high-energy In the Upper Room to creating the profoundly subtle ambience of Brown's Winterreise, which was made for a singer and three dancers. For Taylor, whose dances she has lit for four decades, she provided the dappled dap·pled  
adj.
Spotted; mottled.



[Middle English, probably from Old Norse depill, spot, splash, diminutive of dapi, pool.
, shaded look of his poignant Sunset and highlighted the tawdry sexiness of his Piazzolla Caldera caldera: see crater.
caldera

Large, bowl-shaped volcanic depression that forms when the top of a volcanic cone collapses into the space left after magma is ejected during a violent volcanic eruption. The term is Spanish for “caldron.
.

Lighting design is an art form in itself. "It's like painting," Tipton says. "I call it the music of the eye because like dance it does have theme and variation; it does exist in time as well as in space. If you don't have emphasis, the eye keeps moving around the space and doesn't know where to look."

While collaborating with a choreographer, she makes sure to watch rehearsal before hearing the choreographer's ideas. This way she can "be an innocent audience." She then helps the choreographer clarify his or her intentions and chooses what to light and how. "It's a big responsibility because it's through your eyes that the audience sees the dance."

From his point of view, Paul Taylor says, "It is heavenly to work with Jennifer. She makes my dances look a lot better than they would otherwise--not only visually but communicatively."

Tipton grew up in Columbus, Ohio, blessed with "fantastic parents," a zoologist father and a physicist mother who loved dance. At 15 she made her way to American Dance Festival The American Dance Festival is a six-week summer festival of modern dance performances, and a school for dance currently held at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. , then housed at Connecticut College, and took the Graham Christmas course her senior year in high school. She graduated from Cornell as an English major and came to New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
.

Early on, she was rehearsal mistress for the Merry-Go-Rounders, a company that danced for children, often sitting out to watch so she could critique the performances. "I looked at the bigger picture, and the bigger picture was made by light. Light made the space." And, as she puts it, she "fell in love with light."

At the same time, another Merry-Go-Rounder, Steve Paxton, asked her to perform in his piece Proxy in the first concert of the historic Judson Dance Theater Judson Dance Theater located at the Judson Memorial Church, New York the group of artists that formed Judson Dance Theater are considered the founders of Postmodern dance. The theater grew out of a dance composition class taught by Robert Dunn, a musician who had studied with John  in 1962. At Judson she met Trisha Brown, David Gordon, and Deborah Hay, who were, like Paxton, just beginning to create themselves as dance artists.

But for Tipton, it was light which caught and entranced her. Though basically self-taught, Tipton had help along the way. She hung out with Gary Harris, the master of sound and light to dancers, at the 92nd Street Y, and met Tom Skelton, the preeminent lighting designer for dance, at American Dance Festival. He became her mentor. (She now mentors others at Yale, where she has been teaching since 1981.) In Tipton's memory, Skelton placed her with Taylor's company as stage manager in charge of lighting. Taylor, however, says he hired her, "because touring with my company she could back up our U-haul without damaging anything." At Skelton's recommendation, she began to design lighting on tour.

Now, four decades later, she has designed most of Taylor's lights. "What is so wonderful now about my work with Paul," she says, "is that it has been going on for so long. And there is such variety in the work." Sometimes, when he brings back a piece she lit many years earlier, she looks at it anew and says, "I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 the lighting designer who did those pieces--I've changed that much."

Tipton works on no fixed agenda. "I try to find what's appropriate to the production." However, she often starts with the same basic idea: The center of her stage is usually a bit brighter than the rest of the stage. She pays particular attention to side lights, because, as she points out, "Side lights reveal the body in space."

One of her favorite experiences in dance, she says, was a work she lit in 1973 for Jerome Robbins in Spoleto, Italy. The piece, entitled Celebrations: The Art of the 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
, was for five couples from five countries. "They each did two pas de deux, and Jerry did a beginning and an ending; the ending was just brilliant. He had each couple do a section of the White Swan pas de deux from their own company. Somehow the lighting for that--really the whole thing--was just perfect. I made the right place, the right landscape for each pas de deux. There's only one thing that I would have changed--a light that was high, out of reach, that should have been a different color for one of the dances--but it was the only thing. Everything else was perfect."

It was this dance that put her on the map as a lighting designer. She received a great deal of acclaim for the piece, and set and costume designer Santo Loquasto saw it and asked her to do the Shakespeare plays he was working on at the time. It was the beginning of her work with theater and opera, which has continued through the years. Tipton says she likes working with all three forms: "Each one informs and refreshes the other."

Indeed, one thing leads to another. Tipton recently lit a program for 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.  that included a piece by Christopher Wheeldon. He took to her work so completely that he asked her to light his latest piece for The Royal Ballet, DGV DGV Doppler Global Velocimetry
DGV Direção Geral de Viação
, which premiered in November. Wheeldon says of Tipton that she can "paint my work and present it to me in a way I could never have imagined it myself."

In a sense, Tipton has come full circle in her career. When she was involved with Judson Dance Theater in the early 1960s, many of the dancers were using "found light"--daylight from windows or existing light bulbs. "All of my friends in the Judson group were anti-illusion, anti-lighting, anti-theatrics, anti-any-of-that, so our paths diverged," she says. "It's very interesting and rewarding to me to see that now, later in my life, I've sort of come back. I've worked with Trisha, I've worked with David Gordon, I'm doing a piece of Yvonne Rainer's in the coming year; I light Deborah Hay."

Her most recent piece with Brown was in January at Montclair State University History
Montclair State was established in 1908 as "Montclair Normal School" in response to a growing need for teachers. It was renamed "Montclair State Teachers College" in 1927, when it developed a program of educating secondary school teachers through a Bachelor of Arts
, I love my robots, with set design by Kenjiro Okazaki, marking the first time Tipton has lit robots. Tipton says of Brown, "She's an extraordinary artist; her range of work is always growing, and my range of work is always growing." The two have done operas together, pieces for the Paris Opera Ballet The Paris Opéra Ballet is the official ballet company of the Opéra national de Paris, otherwise known as the Palais Garnier, though known more popularly simply as the Paris Opéra.  and for Brown's company. Tipton cites, in particular, the 2004 O zlozony O composite at the Paris Opera (cover story, April 2005), a work that, she says, "added up to much more than the sum of its parts." For her part, Brown says, "What is alchemy? It's watching Jennifer light the layered elements of a dance. We make magic together."

It's been a lively season for Tipton. Last month she lit Big Dance Theater's new work, The Other Here, at the Japan Society and remounted Robbins' Dybbuk dybbuk

In Jewish folklore, a disembodied human spirit that must wander restlessly, burdened by former sins, until it inhabits the body of a living person. Belief in such spirits was common in eastern Europe in the 16th–17th century.
 for 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. . This month she is busy with the Taylor season, lighting more than 10 dances for the 16-day ran. There are assorted nondance works like the Wooster Group's Hamlet at St. Anne's Warehouse in March and their opera La Didone in Brussels later in the season; a production of Mozart's The Magic Flute at BAM Bam (bäm), town (1996 pop. 70,100), Kerman prov., SE Iran, on the intermittent Bam River. Located on the western edge of the Dasht-e Lut, Bam is a trade center in a henna-growing region. Dates and other fruits are also grown; camels are raised.  in April; San Francisco Opera's Don Giovanni, and remounting Brown's version of Da gelo a gelo at the Paris Opera.

Every one of those works will be enhanced by Tipton's artistic eye. "I always feel that I communicate with light, as opposed to communicating with words," she says. "I speak light."

Amanda Smith is a longtime contributor to Dance Magazine and teaches for Coe College and Hofstra University.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Dance Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Jennifer Tipton the designers
Author:Smith, Amanda
Publication:Dance Magazine
Article Type:Interview
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2007
Words:1335
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