The second program of Pacific Northwest Ballet’s season is Locally Sourced, a mixed rep comprising three world premieres by local choreographers: Eva Stone, Donald Byrd, and Miles Pertl. Of the three, Donald Byrd is the most well-known. Byrd is the Tony-nominated (The Color Purple) and Bessie Award-winning (The Minstrel Show) choreographer in charge of the contemporary dance company Spectrum Dance Theater. I can’t remember when I first became aware of Donald Byrd, or which of his works I first saw. But by the time I saw Christopher D’Ariano perform his piece Wake the Neighbors at Next Step, I already knew I liked his work. So I was looking forward to Love and Loss, and it did not disappoint.
The second program of Pacific Northwest Ballet’s season is Locally Sourced, a mixed rep comprising three world premieres by local choreographers. The first ballet in the program was F O I L by Eva Stone.
Since PNB started sharing their images with me, I’ve stopped using snapshots of the program booklet. But this image is just gorgeous.
The second program of Pacific Northwest Ballet’s season is Locally Sourced, a mixed rep comprising three world premieres by local choreographers. The title Locally Sourced is a gift to bloggers. It begs for restaurant metaphors and punny references to house-made ingredients and sound-to-stage production. But I’ve been a bit overwhelmed lately and can’t generate my usual enthusiasm for a writerly gimmick. Fortunately, enthusiasm for the actual program is in abundant supply. Locally Sourced was a high point in an otherwise bleak week.
Catapult Dance “Homeland” photo by Jazzy Photos, Joseph Lambert c/o Catapult.
After meaning to go for several years, I finally saw a performance by the contemporary dance group Catapult Dance Company last month. They’ve been around for five years, and I’ve been meaning to go see them for almost as long. The piece was called Homeland, and I saw it 24 hours after seeing Carmina Burana at Pacific Northwest Ballet. The contrast kind of messed with my head. But in a good way.
Catapult Dance
Catapult Dance is a nonprofit contemporary dance company in
Seattle headed by Michele Miller (who is also my daughters’ martial arts
teacher). They are a small company, both in number and in output, producing
only one or two new works each year. According their web page, all the work is
a combination of choreography by Miller and improvisation by the dancers. Their
technique is described as an amalgamation of forms that includes modern dance,
contact improvisation, martial arts, and physical theater. Kate Olson develops
a score for each new piece as it is being developed. Looking back through their
history, all the dances address topical social issues.
Homeland
Homeland, as you can probably guess, relates to human migration; the walls we build to keep people in or out; and whether those walls contribute to our feelings of safety or fear. Compared to the dance I’m used to, Homeland was so literal. I mean, even the old story ballets have like a code of pantomime movements that stand for actions. Throughout the hour-ish long piece, the dancers built and destroyed walls, hid behind them and struggled to get over or through them. A couple crossed the Sonoran Desert alone, and one of them doesn’t make it. (Don’t ask me how they made a black box theater be the desert. Something about the lighting, maybe, but it was obvious.) A detainee pounds on doors (there were actually doors in the wall – we didn’t have to imagine those) looking for escape or demanding release.
New Territory
Homeland was a challenging piece for me as a viewer just because the idiom was so different from what I’m used to. This post is coming a long time after PNB’s Carmina, but that ballet was still fresh in my head when I saw Homeland. I could almost feel gears in my head trying to shift.
I know that I missed a lot of things from not knowing where
to put my focus. The score zigzagged over the line between noise and music so
much that I failed to recognize meaningful musical references when they came
up. My friend who watches a lot more contemporary dance than I do had to point
it out to me. My daughters noticed a lot of movements from kung fu that I didn’t
pick up on, even thought I had been told to look for them.
Catapult Dance “Homeland” photo by Jazzy Photos, Joseph Lambert c/o Catapult.
The most obvious differences between ballet and contemporary dance is pointe work. But even a lot of my favorite ballets are barefoot, so that doesn’t bother me. But one thing about contemporary that I have a hard time with is all the walking around. I’ve noticed it at Kaleidoscope performances, and at SIDF earlier this year (that sums up all of my exposure to contemporary dance). Homeland, with its focus on migration, had even more walking around, and honestly, it tested my patience.
But then every time I started to tune out or wonder if these dancers just needed to catch their breath more often than ballerinas, something big would happen and I’d almost miss it. There would be something kind of like a lift except in a shape I’d never imagined before. Or I’d think, “Wait, did that person literally just climb a wall?” I appreciate the classical structures underlying ballet, but my favorite moments are when I see completely new movements, and Homeland offered up a lot of them.
Souvenirs from a New Territory
It was humbling to realize that even with such straightforward stories, I had to work at Homeland. As a ballet fan, I can get a little smug about the people who prefer tutu ballets or only want to watch dances created before 1950 (especially because they usually forget the really innovative things that happened in the first half of the 20th century – Limón anyone?). Smug and complacent are really close neighbors, the kind who like to build walls.
I am not the kind who likes to build walls, so in one sense, Homeland was preaching to the choir. (Not that it was actually preaching, because as a teacher once told me, “Art asks questions.”)
Catapult Dance “Homeland” photo by Jazzy Photos, Joseph Lambert c/o Catapult.
Homeland focused a lot on the suffering of those who must replace one homeland for another, but the dancers frenetically stacking blocks and cowering behind them weren’t showing much joy either. But not all walls are literal. Habits of the mind can be confining, too, and one of the most significant reasons for attending performances is to break down the walls you didn’t know you were building.
Wallis Giunta (Cinderella) and Matthew Grills (Don Ramiro). Sunny Martini photo c/o Seattle Opera
Few opera composers are as well-loved (especially at my
house) as Rossini, and everyone loves a fairy tale. Rossini’s opera is actually
named La Cenerentola, which is a mouthful. If it’s easier, he also
called it Goodness Triumphant. But it’s a good idea to use one of these names
rather than the more familiar one, because Rossini’s Cinderella is not Disney’s
Cinderella. And the “long ago in a land far away” of Seattle Opera’s Cenerentola
is Dickensian London.