Minh Tran & Company.LINCOLN HALL Lincoln Hall may refer to one of the following: Persons
PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY PORTLAND, OREGON OCTOBER 23-25, 2003 THE CROSSING Borders program bears most of the hallmarks of Minh Tran's work, but unfortunately not all. He has assembled a company of some of Portland's most accomplished dancers; on the whole the costumes are luscious and appropriate; the set design for the principal premiere, Nocturnal Path, funded in part by the Doris Duke
Doris Duke (November 22, 1912 – October 28, 1993) was an American heiress and philanthropist. Fund for Dance of the National Dance Project, is both culturally and visually interesting; live music accompanies much of the evening. However, even as a student, the Vietnamese-American artist quite successfully laminated ritualistic rit·u·al·is·tic adj. 1. Relating to ritual or ritualism. 2. Advocating or practicing ritual. rit Asian opera dance onto the explosive movement vocabulary associated with contemporary American choreography, resulting in work that was uniquely and dynamically his. Sadly, not this time. Basically, Crossing Borders sounds one note, and sounds it for a long time. And that note is a vocabulary based on flexed feet and hands, angular Siva-like arms, and more turned-out second position plies plies 1 v. Third person singular present tense of ply1. n. Plural of ply1. than one wishes to see, mostly delivered at a glacial pace. In the curtain-raising Cao-Shu/ Writing in Grass Style, both the music, which was performed by members of Portland Taiko
tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies 1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten. 2. To menace or threaten; intimidate. of tripping over Tripping Over is a British/Australian six-part drama series. Its first episode aired on Network Ten in Australia on October 25 2006, and in the United Kingdom on Five on October 30 2006. In the UK Tripping Over is repeated on Five Life. their floor-hitting, pennant-like sleeves. And while the music was quite splendidly rhythmic and powerful, much of the time it seemed separate from the dancing, making the piece look sloppily crafted and confused. There is no confusion about the subject of Nocturnal Path, a four-section work that made up the second half of the evening. It began with a long ritual that at first, because of the richly colored satin costumes (by Mathern) and the set design (by Christine Bourdette), is strikingly beautiful. But as the dancers continue to perform basically the same movement as in Cao-Shu/Writing, and the revived 1994 Descending, performed in the first half, the mind wandered and the eye strayed. One section ("Chaos") contains some eye-catching, genuine dancing as the company moved swiftly through cat's-cradle patterns that were formed by elastic bands, but unison movement--a lot of it on the floor--looked more like exercise than a dance. There are some redeeming moments. Two are provided by duets performed by the choreographer with Mike Barber For the wide receiver of the same name see Mike Barber (wide receiver). Mike Barber (born June 4, 1953) is the leader of Mike Barber Ministries, a religious charity with which he and his wife DeAnne engage in a full-time, nationwide prison ministry, and which they . In the revival of The War Within, which was excerpted from The Road Home, a 1996 multimedia piece made by Tran based on his experiences as a boat person escaping Vietnam after the war, the two physically well-matched men run freely in a loop around the stage, dancing brilliantly the joyful release of moving after long and perilous confinement. In the last section of Nocturnal Path, the pair performs a handsomely crafted, intertwined sculptured duet with many shapely shape·ly adj. shape·li·er, shape·li·est 1. Having a distinct shape. 2. Having a pleasing shape. shape references to Asian art Asian art can refer to art amongst many cultures in Asia. The Fukuoka Asian Art Museum is the only museum in the world that systematically collects and exhibits Asian modern and contemporary art. motifs. Tran does know his craft--the reworking of Descending certainly demonstrates his ability to expand a piece made originally for three dancers to accommodate five. The costumes shimmer, and the dancers are gorgeous to look at, topless--which they are for part of it--or not. But the piece and the concert are too long and need editing. Since there are almost more words in the program about the funding for this concert than about the work, one wonders if this is choreography by the minute. That would be a pity: Less, in this instance, would definitely be more. FOR MORE INFORMATION wwwmtdance.org; 503.233.0996 |
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