Showing newest 4 of 6 posts from April 2009. Show older posts
Showing newest 4 of 6 posts from April 2009. Show older posts

Apr 30, 2009

False Eyelashes-The Whens, Wheres, Whys and Hows



















I once had a prestigious choreographer/director, Kelli Barclay, tell me that, when at an audition, one should always "just hint" at what you would look like in the staged show that you are auditioning for. For example, if auditioning for 42nd Street, wear just a light colored red lipstick, tiny false eyelashes and a cute 1930s tap outfit. If someone walks into Chelsea Studios wearing a full fledged replicated costume from the original production, hair done up to look like a wig that has been setting over night and 3" false eyelashes that cast dark shadows over your eyes, the casting people don't get to know the natural you while at the audition, which can be a huge factor in the final deciding process at the end. When they are trying to decide between the best ten people, they might ask themselves, "Which one seemed open, down to earth and likeable?" Well, sometimes the answer to this question can be more based on the "au natural" factor than they consciously realize. The human mind can perceive a ton of make-up as a mask that creates an involuntary deception between two people, kind of like an actual material mask at a masquerade ball or a fighters helmet in a medieval joust. I am not saying don't wear make-up, but when you are at an audition and only a couple feet away from the casting table (not performing for 5000 people under stage lights) keep it as real as possible and only accent and highlight.













We are going to talk about whens, wheres and whys of false eyelashes.
Recently, I've done some research on various styles of eyelashes (a special thanks to Janet Lai, assistant brand manager from Revlon). I'd like to talk about these batting beauties in regards to auditions, headshots, film/tv and stage time.


Today, I'm trying out the Minx Revlon false eyelashes to go to a corporate audition.

Pictured directly to the right, these eyelashes are the perfect audition eyelashes because of the tapered

thickness from bottom to top. The thickness at the bottom creates a little shading right where the eyelashes meet the eyelid. This accentuates the beauty of your eye's shape and makes it appear larger. The thin lashes that project from the thick strip create natural looking, healthy eyelashes that don't create a shadow over the eye preventing light to get in. A light in your eye is essential when it comes to someone really trying to get to know you in a short petiod of time. A lot is expressed just from the glowing light in your eye concerning your genuinity. This is why I also recommend this particular style of lashes for your headshots. Far too many times, I have seen headshots in which the subject is wearing long stage lashes, and there isn't enough light in the eyes. Heavy lashes can also make you involuntarily not open your eyes as wide as you normally do resulting in tired looking eyelids and dark eyeballs.


















The Lush Revlon lashes style can be natural or heavily dramatic depending on how you sport them. These lashes come in four segments.

All four segments can be worn for a more dramatic look that I would only recommend for a stage in a large house. One segment can be worn on the outer corners of the lids to create a sassy "cat eye" effect. This can look very natural based on how you apply them.




Lets talk about trimming and customizing your lashes.

First off, these lashes come in one size only, so in order to custom fit them to your eye, break out the toe nail clippers. Nail clippers are far superior to using scissors when trimming the base of the eyelashes because this tool will just trim the base without accidentally taking some eyelashes with them. When trimming the length of the eyelashes, scissors may be used, but only use the tips of the scissors. Cut in a forward back motion, and cut them unevenly so that they resemble real eyelashes. You don't have to worry about cutting them with a jagged edge if they are for the stage.



So, back to the cat eye effect and proper application of lashes...

For stage, don't worry about trimming them. The bigger the better. You are contouring and highligting your face onstage to create an effect for 6000 or maybe even 12000 people (if you are dancing on the stage at the MUNY).


For a more natural look, after you have trimmed the length of the lash so that they are just a hair longer than your natural lashes, apply them right above the eyelashes or right below. I have found that placing the lashes right below the lash line on the upper lid creates an even more natural look than placing it above the lash line. It is much easier to do this with a small section of eyelashes than a whole strip of them.


It is especially essential that when applying the lashes below the lash line, you wait about one minute after applying the glue before applying them to the skin. You want the glue to be tacky, not a wet mess that gets into your eyeball when you attempt to apply them. In fact, this is the case for application of any style eyelashes to any part of your eye. Well, you probably learned this rule in kindergarten when glueing arts and crafts together for your parents. But, if not, practice a couple of times, and you will get it.


In order to get the eyelash segment below the lash line, lift the top eyelid up slightly (oh so slightly...I know some people who can do this without lifting the eyelid at all). The application of eyelashes always works better if there is a layer of mascara already on the lashes. This gives the lashes a shelf to sit on or a guideline to follow, and it ends up looking more natural when there is an even coat of black or brown mascara (whatever color eyelashes you wear) coated evenly on the lashes.


Once the eyelashes have been applied, you can put an additional coat of mascara on the section of your lash line where the eyelashes have been applied to make the false lashes and the real lashes stick together.



Make your own cat eye bits!

I cut up tiny segments of strips of eyelashes and use the segments for my au natural cat eye effect. The length of the segment is usually no longer than 1/8th of an inch, and I apply it right at the outside corners of my eyes (see cat eye effect above). This is a nice way to make the most use out of a pair of eyelashes.



The above pictured Blue Shadow eyelashes are suberb for a glamorous cat eye effect on stage. I think that they are a little too dramatic for an audition or film unless you are going for over the top make-up.

















The Intensifying Revlon lashes are perfect to just slightly enhance your natural beauty for auditions, close-up television and film work and everyday life! When wearing these for those more natural situations, I highly recommend trimming the edges so the are a little uneven to match your natural lashes.




If you want to go straight to the uneven edges right from the start, I would go with the Chic Revlon lashes. They are a liitle thicker than the latter, but they are still on the natural side, especially with the proper application of pre and post eyelash mascara application.


Good luck with your eyelash endeavours, and email me if you have any questions.


www.adriennejeanfisher.com


Apr 24, 2009

The Juniors Rock at the Youth America Grand Prix!


As I walk out the front door of the New York City Center, there is a buzz in the air.  If you listen closely, the buzz turns into a name repeated over and over again: Esteban Hernandez.

By far, the junior men's division at this year’s Youth America Grand Prix is the most exciting, as cabrioles continue to fly higher and pirouettes increase in number and suspension.  But even with all of the fierce competition in this 12-14 year old category, Hernandez soars the highest through the air with hooked feet and a sense of masculinity and confidence that a lot of junior men just don't have.


Esteban Hernandez' older brother, Isaac, won the junior division in 2003, so apparently these ballet genes run in the family.  Although, I'm sure that his training at the prestigious Rock School is a strong factor in his recipe for success.


The Rock School not only presents to the audience beautiful technicians in each category of the competition, but also brings to the table students with that "something special".  The Rock School students rock every section of the competition.  Their students take risks in their pieces making the whole audience hold their breath until each phenomenal step is completed, which is rewarded with joyous screams of appraisal.


Michaela DePrince, a thirteen year old in the junior women division, is up there in that top tier with Hernandez as she brings a unique flair to La Bayadere.  Ms. DePrince is my pick for female dancer of the evening.  She starts the piece abruptly tilting to the side, développé-ing à la seconde en pointe as the leg goes past 180!  Her attitude jetes are all over-splits.  As the entire crowd gasps every time she développés à la seconde, she just smiles and shows absolutely no effort as her leg creates a seam with the side of her head.  To boot, she has such a sweet personality on stage, making it impossible for anyone to be a hater for her being such a fierce diva at thirteen.


Not quite as impressive this evening is the male and female senior division that showcases 15-19 year olds.  The competition isn’t as intense post-intermission, but there are a few stand outs.  In the female senior division, Beckanne Sisk, another Rock student, knocks us out with an abrupt dive into a penché en relevé to open the piece, which she repeats at least three times as flawlessly as the first one.  A firecracker of a dancer, Misako Mori, dances my favorite Don Quixote variation of the evening (and there are many of these).  She rushes on stage swishing her long red skirt with fervor, a fervor that lives in all of her extremities and her flirty attitude all the way to the end.


In the senior male division,  Young Gyu Choi, brings us yet another look at Don Quixote, and while he doesn’t bring the colorful character that Ms. Mori brings, he is the most flawless technician of this category.  At one point, he does 4 pirouettes into a double coupé turn in plié before ending with two more pirouettes, the last of which is suspended as the music seems to hold its breath before he ends to grand applause.



At the start of the fifth La Esmeralda variation in the senior women division, I have the entire piece memorized knowing exactly when each triple pirouette and tambourine crash is coming, creating a very high standard for the fifth La Emeralda to execute nothing less than clean triple pirouettes and fierce musicality.  Unfortunately, the first La Esmeralda variation, performed by Madoka Kariya, is the only one who possesses the high level of musicality for this tambourine dance.  A stunning moment is when she ends the piece with a jete-attitude, her back attitude hitting the tambourine held by her hand high in the air at the precise moment in the music.  


It is difficult to be at the end of a competition because the audience is tired and has seen everything after this three hours and fifteen minutes of brilliant performances.  Although there were just a few who really stand out this evening, it could have been so different on another evening, and this is just the nature of putting yourself into a competition.  


But, all in all, this is such a good experience for these children.  When you enter the professional world, you must thrust yourself into a competition on a daily basis with your peers as you audition for companies and gigs.  No matter the outcome of this evening (the results will be announced at the Gala tomorrow night), each of these pre-professionals can put on their resumes that they made it to the Youth America Grand Prix finals in New York City, an accomplishment that will not go unnoticed.



All photos by VAM Productions, a group of Professional Photographers and Videographers who offer services to the performing arts industry. VAM Productions is proudly affiliated with the Youth America Grand Prix (YAGP).




iDANZ Critix Corner

Official Dance Review by Adrienne Jean Fisher

Performance: Youth American Grand Prix New York City Finals

Venue: New York City Center

Date: Tuesday, April 21, 2009 at 7:00PM

www.iDANZOnline.com


www.adriennejeanfisher.com


Apr 18, 2009

The Deganit Shemy Supernova

This evening at Dance Theatre Workshop something very special is taking place.  Deganit Shemy's Arena, a full evening length work, gives the audience the chance to witness a supernova of the choreographer's fierce creativity and the dancers' acute aggression.  In addition to being established as a multi-award winning choreographer, this New York and Israeli based choreographer also has the distinguished status of Artist-in-Residence at Dance Theatre Workshop, Dance New Amsterdam, Tribeca Performing Arts Center and Movement Research.  After witnessing this display of choreographic fireworks, phenomenally rubik's-cubed together, I am not surprised that she is such an esteemed choreographer at such an early stage in her career. 


Arena dives into the complex world of activities and emotions inside and outside a fight arena.  Shemy's imagination is limitless as she vividly explores this world both literally and abstractly.  There are moments of intense fighting, based in contact improv, inside the ring that interchange with abstract moments such as two girls wearing gas masks as they make kissing sounds and nuzzle each other.  The bare stage littered with water bottles and other gym paraphernalia, is all dark except for a big square spotlight representing the arena (lighting by Lenore Doxsee).  This simplistic yet effective presentation of the world of the arena parallels her choreography.  


Very odd is the soundtrack (Tei Blow) that they dance to, and at first, it seems like just bubbling ambient noise, but soon, we realize that these shifting sounds are catalysts for some of the movement.  Bells ring as they mark  the end or the beginning of a tournament.  Thunderstorms crash when a bottle of water is poured over someones head, and dancers react to an intense oncoming tide that forces them to fall back from the crashing waves, falling to the ground and flipping over in the opposite direction.  Also, the two ticking metronomes on the stage add intensity to each match.


The five women, clad in gym shorts and sports bras, are the ultimate warriors with their fierce aggression and killer bodies!  Deganit's choreography is very aggressive in itself including kicks to the lower back or the knee (as we hear the hard smack of a foot to skin), which dually initiates movement and a believable world of fighters in the arena.  


These five feisty dancers are so in sync with one another!  It is as if they have lived and breathed together for an extended period of time. There is really no rhythm in the music that they would otherwise use as a guide to stay together.  Not only do they stay incredibly in sync when dancing in unison, but they also show off their skill of become entangled in a quicker than quick instant.  Very impressive, is when the lights go black, and they go from being spread out all over the stage (and this is a very big space) to tightly intertwined in just a second.  Now that is drop dead perfection!  I officially give a Fierce-ness Award to the entire ensemble for their incredible awareness of one another!


Shemy uses the dancers' bodies to portray both animate fight scenes and inanimate objects in the ring.  The most in your face inanimate object is the "ring ropes" that the dancers frequently become as they link arms in a straight line.  Sometimes, a fighter will bounce off of the outside or the inside of the ropes much like a WWE fighter would, just for theatrical purposes.  Sometimes, the dancers pair up and create two sets of ring ropes as the fifth girl tries to get through them.  After she fails to get through them heading south, she tries to go east and west, but these human ropes are too quick for her, and they quickly change to prevent her from going that way either.  When this fighter (Savina Theodorou, a hauntingly dynamic performer) dives through the human ropes, she bounces up and down as she becomes entangled in these these bungee-like human arm-ropes.


Tangled is something that these  dancers constantly are, and when limbs start to kick and flail, there is no immediate telling which body the limbs belong to.  Much of the group work is based in contact improvography (improvisation and choreography all mixed and mashed).  Interesting is the way a lot of phrases repeat four of five times before moving on to the next section, really branding the intensity of each phrase, a brand that one is happy to go home with!


The fact that Deganit Shemy does not have any official dance training, but has studied Eshkol-Wachman Movement Notation in depth, is such a unique blessing to the contemporary dance community.  Her movement has the ability to be trademarked as Shemy movement because a lot of the vocabulary is absolutely untainted by familiar dance steps.  Deganit Shemy is New York's unfiltered choreographer.  


Thank you to all of the dancers in this evenings show for powerful, committed performances: Robin Brown, Erika Eichelberger, Denisa Musilova, Leah Nelson and Savina Theodorou.


Photo by Anthony Collins


iDANZ Critix Corner
Official Dance Review by
Adrienne Jean Fisher 

Choreographer: Deganit Shemy

Performance: Arena 

Venue: Dance Theatre Workshop, New York City 

Date: April 16, 2009 

www.iDANZOnline.com

Apr 11, 2009

The Aspiration of Freedom-A Review of Nederlands Dans Theater II





* * *
Nederlands Dans Theater II is a breath of fresh air because of the choreographic originality combined with the lack of fear exuded by each performer who graces the stage. It is interesting that one of the aspects of the company that I like so much is "lack of fear" because many of the pieces this evening tends to nudge the audience's brain into that weird place that one fears going to where your hairs stands on end.

At the same rate that the works instill fear, they also instill laughter, curiosity and awe. My jaw is dropped throughout most of this performance because of the many emotions that each piece is stirring inside of me at once. The Nederlands choreography sends my head spinning as a result of their continued originality. Just when I think that a piece can't possibly get any more brilliant, the dancers rise even higher than the last moment of brillance. They continue to ride on this exponentially rising cloud of innovation all the way to the last moment of the show, which is greeted with a standing ovation and screams of praise from the entire audience.
*
The show opens with a piece called Said and Done choreographed by Paul Lightfoot and Sol Léon. A pipe organ dramatically fills the air with the first chords of Johann Sebastian Bach's Toccato and Fugue in d-minor while the curtain rises to reveal a land of beautiful vignettes of a single man's memories of life.

Among the first images are four men on stage in only black pants. The men of Nederlands II have unsurpassable technique that is coated with style and masculinity. Their virtuosity is displayed right off the bat with side extensions reaching an angle of at least 160 degrees! The mens' bare torsos reveal every minuscule movement from the tiny twitch of a shoulder blade to a quick-breathed expanding ribcage, making these tiny movements in between their grand movements even more significant and exaggerated under the stage lights. Most of their movements are circular in this section, seeming to represent the circle of life in a man's lifetime. Not only do they dance in circles, big and small, with the other men, but they also dance in circles around their own person as they double tour, shéné jeté, tours jeté and perform "circular arm-ography" that includes a lot of fast circles around the face and the body with hands clasped together.

Because of the lighting, the mist on stage, the pipe organ and the white and black garb and backdrop, images of a churchyard or a graveyard come to mind. The lighting is effective in creating darkness just in front of the black curtain upstage so that when dancers walk upstage to exit, they look as though they are disappearing into the darkness or vanishing in midair like apparitions. Kudos to lighting designer Tom Bevoort.

The three women in this piece enter though the upstage curtain like three bright white ghosts boldly appearing out of the darkness. The women move to three spots on the stage before standing still in a slight upper-back contraction as their shoulders and heads hang down to their chests. As the women stand frozen like spirits at rest, the male dancers begin to circle around the three female statues as they continue to circle each other and themselves. Impressive partnering between the males comes to a boiling point as they circle around the women. At one point, a "coffee grinder" movement on the ground happens while his partner rond de jambe en l'airs over his head, before both ending in an arabesque at precisely the same moment.

When the women "come alive", they are electric from head to foot. They flick a foot and a hand as if shaking off the pins and needles from being still for far too long. A long undulating movement ends in a flick of the hand and head simultaneously. Both men and women vanish into the upstage darkness, all except one man. This man dances in silence. This silence is very dramatic following the rich organ that has carried us through thus far. The silence is "pin drop" thick, and this soloist, César Faria Fernandes, fills the thick silence with a presence that is oozing with resistance in his limbs and searching in his face as black crow feathers begin to fall on him from the sky.

Lightfoot and Léon have associated black crow feathers with death as they paint a picture of a man post-mortem looking back on vignettes of his life. His memories are represented by the other dancers through duets and solos. César stands in a spotlight all the way to the right of the stage while black feathers begin to fall on him one feather at a time before falling in heaping piles. He dances with the feathers as he remains in the spotlight. He flawlessly turns, jumps and falls face first into the feathers as if to become one with them as he becomes one with death.

As César remains in the now yellow hued spotlight, the vignettes begin, danced to "The Friends' Lament" from Capriccio sopra la lontanaza del suo fratello dilettissimo in B-Flat. Jin Young Won materializes from the blackness and shows off the prowess of her expressive legs and the emotional poignancy of her torso movements. A breathtaking moment is when Jin's leg rond de jambes from front to side (and more and more side until it can't go any further) as the space between her hips and ribcage continues to lengthen at the precise speed and force that her leg is moving. She is joined by a man, who assists her in displaying some very unique (and barely audible) partnering such as a turn that ends in both partners landing head to head, one on top of the other, both in plank position.

Much of the partnering in the third section of Said and Done shows how both male and female are highlighted equally instead of the "traditional" male being in the females' shadows as he lifts and supports her. A woman steps on a man's thigh as a prep to roll over his shoulders, and before she is finished with her movement, he begins to turn and move his body in reaction to hers. The partnering here is an impenetrable web of reacting to each others movements, not a man being as still and solid as possible in order to perform the single task of flaunting the female. Deservedly, the spotlight burns bright on both equally.

As the partnering continues, César is clearly in pain. He begins to catch the falling feathers and clutch them as if clinging to a memory. At times, he has to look away from the duets. In the end, César mimics the position of a man in the vignette in a flat back grand pléa, each man's arms on the exact same plane in second position. Are they the same person? Nederlands II instills questions such as these in the mind that truly are the seeds of great art: deep thought.

The dancers have an incredible lightness of being as they jump, turn and partner inaudibly, yet another factor that makes them all so believable as apparitions and as embodiments of everything that has been Said and Done in this man's lifetime. Said and Done was created in 2001 and dedicated to Hans van Manen. The dancers in this piece are Roger van der Poel, César Faria Fernandes, Anton Valdbauer, Idan Sharabi, Jin Young Won, Aram Hasier and Carolina Mancuso.
*
The kings of all previous ingenuity have been surpassed tonight with Jirí Kylián's Sleepless. My jaw continues to drop and my heart continues to skip beats throughout this piece as it invokes fear and laughter simultaneously. In the program notes, Kylián goes into depth for the audience about a philosophy that "will always be [his] closest companion"...The nature of moving is such that if you move towards something you automatically move away from something else. Are we really clear in our intentions?" With this philosophy as his starting point, Kylián decides to explore a period of time when we are not physically moving toward or away from anything-sleep.

A crackling is heard. On a diagonal, four strips of marley hang perpendicular to the ground, held into in place with metal poles. A lone female stands in front of a "shin buster" light in the wing downstage left. Her positioning creates a tall shadow on the marley strip closest to her. A glass harmonica begins to sing its watery, surreal song created by Dirk Haubrich based on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Adagio in c-minor. The girl and her shadow play with one another before she gradually comes closer and closer to her shadow, at which point, her shadow becomes smaller and more dense. She puts her hands on the lip of a shadowy door. She peeks in. She gets closer to the door. The shadow door turns into a real gap that she can step into. She puts her foot and head into the black hole of nothingness, her attitude devant being the last part that is seemingly sucked into this black hole.

The marley and the lighting (Kees Tjebbes) in front and behind the panels help to create the illusion that there is nothing but blackness behind the wall. Hands pop out and frantically shake as abruptly as one of those scary moments in a movie that you would have covered your eyes for, but your eyes are forced to witness it because of its unpredictability. The music gets fast, furious and "nails on chalk-board" dissonant when the hands uncontrollably shake making this moment seem like a persons worst nightmare in which millions of hands attack from under the bed or from an unknown place such as is created on stage this evening. The wall between reality and the unconscious world makes it seem as though everything in front and/or behind the wall is not connected at all like a woman being cut in half by a magician.

This original composition is complemented and truly sketched out onstage with the choreography. There is a "pop" in the music, and a head pops out . There is a stunning moment when a girl flies out from the blackness behind the wall into a mans arms so quickly that it looks as if she teleported herself into his arms. Another wonderful moment that is filled with the magic of being terrifying and funny at the same time, is when a girl reaches hands first behind one strip, and a pair of hands come out the other side stretching in the same diagonal, about 4 feet up higher. The audience laughs at this illusion that she has been elongated many feet. When she submerges her whole body behind the wall, it appears as though she is flying like superman as the stretched out arms continue to reach on the other side.

The imaginative world that Jirí Kylián creates behind the wall is a terrifying, yet curious one. This must be how Alice before Wonderland felt. The partnering behind the wall must be intense and intricate, but to the audience, it looks as though the dancers are floating behind the wall as if they are in outer-space where gravity doesn't exist. At certain points, a girl's legs will come out from each side of the strip toward the top of the wall, meaning that she must be on a person's shoulders back there performing this feat. Limbs come out of the darkness and then quickly get drawn back in like a snail back into its shell or a snake's slithery tongue quickly retracting. In one instance, a dancer's head gets sucked into the darkness while her body remains outside. Her body shakes and writhes as if she is seeing something horrible "on the other side".

The partnering in Sleepless is as unique as some of the most phantasmagorical dreams that a person could have. The women wear colored leotards that match the men's pants, greens, reds, blues. The lights often change to a shade of blue when the partnering evokes a deep sea dream as the man effortlessly lifts the girl by holding onto her ankle in arabesque, making her float above him as if through water. The frantic, "nails on chalk board" sound revisits the dream when the couple turns the focus to their hands, which flop and hit together faster than seems possible. When the horrible sound ends, the couple returns to the flowing dream sequence. These abrupt U-turns that are made from the most terrifying to the most peaceful point in a dream cause the audience to be on the edge of their seat with their hair raised!

The dancers who duet and react to and embody the sounds of this dream/nightmare, accompanied always by the eerie glass harmonica, are Carolina Mancuso, Maud de la Purification, Jin Young Won, Anton Valdbauer, Menghan Lou and Roger Van der Poel. There are moments of soft, fast human whispers coming from all different directions. A heavy thunderstorm follows. The "nails on chalkboard" moments continue to explode like firecrackers at random moments. Sleepless concludes in the same way it begins. A girl's shadow becoming smaller and smaller, until she slips through the door leading to darkness and dreams, except this time, she is slipping through the door to bring her back to reality or to the conscious world-or is she doing just that? "Are we really clear in our intentions?...Are we really sure that we want to move towards or away from...?
*
The text of a Gertrude Stein's poem, "If I told Him: A Complete Portrait of Picasso", is painted on stage in front of us in Shutters Shut as the text is mixed up and mashed in the style of a most virtuosic disc jockey...or a Picasso painting. This particular dj, Gertrude Stein, is the sole serenader of a man and a woman gradually making their way from stage right to stage left as they paint in a Picasso fashion every nuance of a poem with their bodies as conceived by Paul Lightfoot and Sol Léon.

The first line of the poem is introduced by a stiff- lipped girl, Carolina Mancuso. Dressed in a white leotard with limbs and face powdered just as white, begins moving with isolated, exaggerated hip, hand and head movements to the opening lines of the poem:

If I told him would he like it. Would he like it if I told him. Would he like it would Napoleon would Napoleon would would he like it. If Napoleon if I told him if I told him if Napoleon. Would he like it if I told him if I told him if Napoleon.

Words get repeated. Sentences get repeated. There is a moment of silence in which her mouth goes from lips tightly pressed together to a gaping open mouth that creates a red blotch on her otherwise white body. These factors emphasize the oddity and modernism of this piece. This is yet another example of Nederlands Dance Theatre II as dance pioneers in the world of the absurd.

Idan Sharabi quickly jumps out of the downstage right wing, donning the same powdered white skin as Carolina, but donning contrasting black shorts that come up to just below his ribcage. They both quickly do 180s to reveal his all white back-half of costume and her all black back-half of costume. They use this yin and yang striking contrast to emphasize certain syllables and accents in the poem as they quickly turn back to front and front to back.

Shutters shut and open so do queens. Shutters shut and shutters and so shutters shut and shutters and so and so shutters and so shutters shut and so shutters shut and shutters and so.

A two dimensional painting is created in the way that both dancers stay on the same plane throughout the entire piece as they move from one side of the stage to the other. Their white limbs create traces in the air as they depict a certain phrase or word, a phrase or word whose sound sends corresponding trails through the air.

To exact resemblance the exact resemblance as exact as a resemblance, exactly as resembling, exactly resembling, exactly in resemblance exactly a resemblance, exactly and resemblance. For this is so. Because.

Lightfoot and Léon along with lighting designer Tom Bevoort create porcelain, marionettes onstage as they move in isolated, disjointed movements to paint the poem. Stein's poem is the puppet master, the dancers only movements coming from a syllabic string tug to the left, right, up or down. In Shutters Shut, the collaboration of text, choreography and performance is absolutely unparalleled.
*
The final piece of the evening, Sad Case, makes the men and women of a vintage photograph come alive. Although, when these characters come to life, they are raunchy, not exactly what one would expect of these Chaplinesque beach characters as they dance over-exaggerated, eccentric moves to Muchachita and Maria Bonita (Perez Prado), Frenesi (Dominguez), Always in my heart (E. Lecuona), Watusi (Ray Barretto) and Peridia (Los Tres Panchos). Bryan Arias, Menghan Lou, César Fernandes, Carolina Mancuso and Vania Vaz dance a dance of the unexpected, which I am starting to expect at this point in the show!

Extreme high spirits (to say the least) possess each dancer at different points in the piece that take shape in outbursts of loud laughter with mouths as wide open as they could possibly be. In the program notes, Paul Lightfoot attributes the maniacal laughter and exaggerated emotions to the high hormones and emotions of Sol Léon's pregnancy that she was deep into at the time of the piece's conception (no pun intended). This state of affairs must have been the "seed" for the emphasis on the males' "male-ness" throughout the entire piece. The crotch area of the men is highlighted throughout with exaggerated pelvic thrusts and even bold "crotch-grabbing".

Sad Case brings to life the quote "A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle"-Gloria Steinman. This quote printed in the program notes brings to light the feminist point of view, "we don't need 'em". Why? Well, once again, Lightfoot and Léon explore absurdism with eccentric dance moves that make the men and the women not flow together organically, and literally butt heads. They tend to not use opposition whatsoever, and in our culture, and well, in science, opposites attract, so there isn't a lot of attraction between the two sexes here.

Their heads roll side to side in the same direction as their steps, which are exaggerated greatly as the arms stay glued to the sides of the body. These movements are reminiscent of the teachings of Betsy Baytos, who is the current choreographer of the Vaudeville Cirque Du Soleil show coming to New York City in 2009 and has dedicated a good portion of her life to teaching the eccentric dance moves of Ray Bolger, Dick Van Dycke, Marilyn Miller and Joe Brown to people and corporations such as Disney, where she works on animation choreography.

All of the dancers have white powder all over their bodies. The women wear sea-green leotards, and the men wear sea green underwear/corsets that come up to right below their ribcages, illustrating a faded photograph of beach-goers in the 30's. But, before any dancers arrive on stage as their antique -selves, there is a "bit" with the lights much in line with a Max in the Flight of the Navigator movie.

There are two sets of lights, one downstage and one upstage, that hang from the catwalk in an upside down "v" on long, black poles. While these lights look at one each other as the music begins, they appear as though they are having a conversation as they gradually move together. The unusual lighting once again comes from Tom Bevoort, and this "light-ography" brilliantly sets the stage for the comedic piece that ensues.

The piece begins with one girl coming through the upstage curtain and awkwardly passing through the lights that are almost perpendicular to the ground by this point. Then, she starts the awkward walk downstage as her pushed-forward hips lead the way for every step forward. This awkwardness in movement is a breath of fresh air with all of its eccentricities! The awkwardness and maniacal tension continues as two men walk the "catwalk" the lights have created with mouths wide open as they laugh loudly and crazily. One doesn't know whether to be amused or scared.

The lights remain alive with a sense of humor throughout the piece. There are "cat-call whistles" in the music, and it seems as though the lights are the ones cat-calling to the male and female dancers. This choreography just has no boundaries. Many of the moves resemble the way you dance as a three year old child to your favorite cartoon theme song, except Lightfoot and Léon's choreography puts a layer of sex on the whole "frolicing innocence" with a concentration on the pelvic region. At times, the crotch is what starts the movement. For example, a man grabs his crotch, pushes it forward and moves forward as if dragged by a rope that has been tied between his legs.

The dancers form a straight line as they gradually rotate, in true Rockette-fashion, 90 degrees at a time. This line becomes the home base for all of the raving, pelvic thrusting eccentric dancers before they step "out of the line" to solo or duet, which might include a dance move that looks a lot like a velociraptor impression. As they laugh, speak jibber and move like Jim Carey comedians and comediennes, I think, 'how beautiful'. The quirky choreography and idiosyncratic personalities Nederlands Dance Theatre II engenders is a gift of liberation for the world of dance, whether it be modern, ballet or music theatre.

The piece ends with a man spread eagle on his back, which is arched up, and his head downstage staring at the audience. The lights all come down to highlight his crotch. A little egocentric? We definitely get the point.
*
Nederlands Dance Theatre II has an understanding of the fusion of music and dance that is totally groundbreaking. I have never seen such intimacy between music and dance without the musical compositions imprisoning the choreography or the dancers. All that I see here is freedom in movement, in expression, in voice and in character, each virtue being a universal aspiration, making this company an inspiration for us all. Oh, and this is the apprentice company? When is the parent company coming to town?
* * *


iDANZ Critix Corner 
Official Dance Review by Adrienne Jean Fisher
Performance: Nederlands Dans Theater II

Choreography: Jirí Kylián and Paul Lightfoot/Sol Léon

Venue: The Joyce Theater, New York City 
Date:Thursday, April 9th, 2009, 8:00 PM 

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