Move over, Martha.Richard Move achieves the sublime and the ridiculous with his uncanny reincarnation of dance deity Martha Graham. In his spacious digs, located comfortably above an after-hours club on the edge of lower Manhattan's meatpacking district. Richard Move is expounding on his alter ego, Martha--a present-day reincarnation of choreographic goddess Martha Graham. "She's that stately, artistic grande dame that we just don't have around anymore," he says, gesticulating ges·tic·u·late v. ges·tic·u·lat·ed, ges·tic·u·lat·ing, ges·tic·u·lates v.intr. To make gestures especially while speaking, as for emphasis. v.tr. To say or express by gestures. elegantly with his cigarette, "She's like movie star royalty." The statuesque stat·u·esque adj. Suggestive of a statue, as in proportion, grace, or dignity; stately. stat u·esque Move regularly re-creates Graham's mystique, not to mention her sublime campiness, in the cabaret atmosphere of the inimitably zany downtown New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. nightclub Mother. Since 1996 he has orchestrated the "Martha @ Mother" series, where Martha acts as hostess to living dance legends, celebrities, and cutting-edge dance talent. Draped in stretch fabric with tridentlike combs lancing her impossibly oversize jet-black bun, Martha sucks in the spotlight, strikes a classic Graham pose, and delivers actual excerpts from the original diva's notebooks. She also engages living dance stars (the likes of Merce Cunningham) in wickedly wry discussions, including choreographic tips for the underlings. "This Martha is from the 1950s, when she was already a living legend. The decline was starting, and there was a little bit of danger being around her, maybe even rumors that she was drinking a little," Move says devilishly. "Although in her late 50s, she would still out-dance the girls who were 19 in the company." The designer Isaac Mizrahi, who narrated the last series in March, became a fan instantly when he met Move in London last year, in part because he was able to fulfill his suppressed childhood desire to laugh at Martha. "More than the portrayal of Martha Graham, for me there is something about this character called Martha, who is Martha Graham but is a current version of Martha Graham," he says. "She's alive. Martha is a woman who is 6 foot 5, who is a control freak, who is a real taskmistress task·mis·tress n. A woman who imposes tasks, especially burdensome or laborious ones. Noun 1. taskmistress - a woman taskmaster taskmaster - someone who imposes hard or continuous work . It is so tender, once removed from the situation itself. Richard is Martha. And it tickles!" Move, who grew up in rural Virginia, fatefully walked into his first dance class in high school--a Graham technique class, naturally. "It was very mystical and religious," he recalls. After graduating from Virginia Commonwealth University Formed by a merger between the Richmond Professional Institute and the Medical College of Virginia in 1968, VCU has a medical school that is home to the nation's oldest organ transplant program. , where he concentrated on dance and theater, he moved to New York in 1989, only to realize that the Graham company was not the right venue for him. "I didn't want to be one of those two-dimensional, cartoonlike men. And I knew I wouldn't get all the women's roles," he says, roaring with laughter. As a cofounder co·found tr.v. co·found·ed, co·found·ing, co·founds To establish or found in concert with another or others. co·found of the nightclub Jackie 60, Move invented the Martha persona in conjunction with a dance-belt auction for the HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. Arts Network. "In our never-ending quest for new shows every week, that was one of the new themes. I was kind of nervous about it," he confesses. "I thought, This is one of our more obscure themes--dance legends night!" Because of Martha's wild, unexpected popularity. Move inaugurated the series "Martha @ Mother" in 1996. But the Graham estate immediately issued a cease-and-desist order. "I was terrified ter·ri·fy 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. ," says Move. The club owner, however, took the publicity football and ran with it, prompting gossip in Michael Musto's Village Voice column and a packed house on opening night. The Graham estate eventually clammed up, and the show has since won two Bessie awards for achievement in the downtown dance scene. Explaining gay men's fascination with Martha, Move says, "The work is so homoerotic. Martha was particular about her men--big, beefcake beef·cake n. Informal 1. Images, especially photographs, of minimally attired men with muscular physiques. 2. Attractive men with muscular physiques, such as those in these images. , handsome men who wore very little. There were phalluses all over the place, on her headgear and in the Isamu Noguchi sets." (Bertram Ross, Graham's longtime dance partner, was just such a dancer--big, handsome, and happily gay.) "Martha's choreography was also a really early-feminist thing," adds Move, "with the man as the sex object--not the woman." In her show at Mother, Martha demonstrates this in an excerpt from Phaedra when she contracts her pelvis to beckon Playgirl play·girl n. A woman devoted to the pursuit of pleasurable activities. centerfold cen·ter·fold n. 1. A magazine center spread, especially a foldout of an oversize photograph or feature. 2. a. The subject of a photograph used as a centerfold, often a nude model. b. Reid Hutchins, who sports only a jockstrap with a '50s hood ornament protruding in front. The "Martha @ Mother" series that runs May 3-5 features Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo is an all-male drag ballet corps parodying the clichés of romantic and classical ballet. It was founded by choreographer Peter Anastos in the United States in 1974 as a group producing small shows for friends, performing late-late shows in dancing a drag version of The Dying Swan (with Martha finishing off the swan) and a showdown between Martha and real-life choreographic renegade Yvonne Rainer, whom Move calls "the Valerie Solanas of dance" with her anti-Graham manifesto. Move is also finishing the filming of Martha's World, an independent feature film in which actor Ann Magnuson portrays a documentary filmmaker striving to capture the essence of Martha as she dispenses oracular o·rac·u·lar adj. 1. Of, relating to, or being an oracle. 2. Resembling or characteristic of an oracle: a. Solemnly prophetic. b. Enigmatic; obscure. nuggets, communes with Andy Warhol, bestows her pedagogy on choreographer Mark Morris, and then picks up Deborah Harry in her limo to go jewelry shopping at David Webb. "Fun, right?" says Move. "But it's all real." Carman is also writes for The New York Times. |
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