Dance Series 02
The Poetry of Being (Nicole
Haskins); Broken Open (Amy Seiwert);
Be Here Now (Trey
McIntyre)
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| The Company of Smuin's Poetry of Being |
With the strands of Tchaikovsky floating all around them,
six members of the company in deep blue costumes designed by Susan Roemer
surround two featured dancers in flesh hues.
The combination of numbers of dancers from two to ten varies as
individuals, couples, and trios glide in and out with grace and seemingly
little effort. Slanted bodies are slid
by partners across great spans of the stage, only to be gently lifted to the
music’s swell. The entire group of ten
suddenly moves in slow motion to be followed by near frenzy as couples finally
freeze in momentary hugs.
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| Benjamin Warner & Terez Dean |
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| Ben Needham-Wood, Rachel Furst & Jonathan Powell |
With costumes whose colorful tops bear the graffiti one
might find on the protest walls of the late eighties in Berlin or Prague, the
full stage of sixteen dancers in Amy Seiwert’s Broken Open combines rushing sweeps of bodies on and off stage with
athletic, strong movements that take them high and low. At times, dancers become much like a conveyer
belt to move along one of the members in a beautifully sculpted machine. At other times, male bodies in coordinated
leaps like gazelles on a plain move across the stage with such power and height
as to take one’s breath away.
The six movements offer a chance for a
number of different individuals to star for a few minutes in highlighted
performance, supported by the electric excitement of other ensemble
members. Many combinations of sex and
number of dancers come together in stunning fashions, with always the effect of
some surprise and awe in the sheer power of the moves. Music from three of Julia Kent’s albums
feature the looped cello, found sounds, and electronic music that distinguish
her style and that provide a sense of friction and dissonance when things get
too close and need to be Broken Open.
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| Jonathan Powell, Terez Dean & Michael Wells |
The many fringes, colorful head-bands, half-naked bodies,
and psychedelic colors of flowing and skimpy costumes employed by Sandra
Woodall’s homage to the late ‘60s ensure that the fabulously entertaining dance
sequences will remind many in the audience of their teenage days in streets,
parks, and concerts. There is much fun
and frivolity as well as love and community explicitly implied in the
choreography of Trey McIntyre.
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| Jonathan Powell & Members of Be Here Now |
The always changing array of individual, many coupled, and
entire group movements in dance is accompanied by a nostalgic soundtrack of no
less than nine classics of the Summer of Love period, featuring the likes of
the Mamas and Pappas, Sly & the Family Stone, Jefferson Airplane, and of
course, Janis Joplin. Each of these
numbers elicits memories of long-ago images and experiences for many of us in
the audience, especially as we witness the music’s wonderful interpretations by
the dancers before us.
But perhaps it is the Voice Church Inspire Choir’s rendition
of the union song “Which Side Are You On” – along with the powerful conflict
and coming together of the choreography we see so dynamically performed by the
troupe – that has the biggest connection with our world today. In a current time when the politics and power
of the 1% and the divisions between them and everyone else only seem to get
starker by the day, the frustrations of forty years ago -- seen so vividly in
the faces and the moves of the dancers -- are now as real as then. And thus the title, Be Here Now, takes on added significance.
All in all, there is no way an audience member – even one as
I who spends much more time seeing plays and musicals than dance – can not walk
out of Smuin’s Dance Series 02
without feeling invigorated, inspired, and totally entertained in so many
respects.
Rating: 5 E
Having concluded its
performance at The Mountain View Center for the Arts (May 5-7, 2017), Smuin’s Dances Series 02 continues at Lesher
Center for the Arts May 12-13, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, May 19-28, and
Sunset Center in Carmel, June 2-3
Tickets are available online at http://www.smuinballet.org/.
Photo Credits: Keith Sutter (The Poetry of Meaning, Be Here Now); Chris Hardy (Broken Open).





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