The opening movement was set to Morton Feldman’s “Piece for Four Pianos,” which was played by Sephen Gosling and Hanna HyunJung Kim on either side of the apron of the stage and Alan Moverman and Craig Baldwin in the pit. It is almost non-music, with seemingly random plunks and dings creating an ominous soundscape. Slowly, Taylor Stanley and David Gabriel joined Phelan for some posing and adagio isolations. They wore metallic unitards (by Karen Young) in peachy and bronze tones. Abraham’s other works for the company, “The Runaway” (2018) and “Love Letter (On Shuffle)” (2022) were the opposite in almost every way. They featured pop and rap soundtracks (featuring James Blake, Kanye West, and Jay-Z), wild costumes with bold prints, feathers, and headdresses (by Gilles Deacon), and fierce bravado. “Fell” was a great counterpoint to these. In the first movement especially, it was as if Abraham slowed these showier works down and put them through a filter of Balanchine’s “Episodes” and Merce Cunningham solos.
Abraham shifted gears somewhat in the second and third movements. The cascading rubato of Jason Moran’s “All Hammers and Chains” inspired technically flashy passages for KJ Takahashi and Sebastián Villarini-Vélez. Nico Muhly’s spare “Falling Berceuse” provided the framework for a meditative pas de deux for Stanley and Indiana Woodward. In the film version, this pas was shot from above so that the dancers’ shadows in the pool of light on the floor were integral to the dance. Aerial views were not feasible in the live setting, but the pair interacted with the spotlight in other ways. To close the ballet, Stanley floated Woodward out of Dan Scully’s circle of light in slow rotations like a planetary body orbiting away from the sun. The onstage “Fell” didn’t overtly tackle racism or Covid, but it was well-crafted and stylish. Its three distinct moods were tied together by the dancers and the pianos, and that was enough.
“Fell’s” entire cast was stellar. Stanley, Villarini-Vélez, and India Bradley reprised their roles from the film, while Gabriel, Phelan, Takahashi, Woodward, and Jules Mabie made excellent debuts. Phelan and Gabriel were, along with Mejia, MVP’s this spring. I didn’t catch all their debuts, but those that I saw were promising. Phelan nicely ratcheted her confidence up to high for the showy “Paquita” and turned it to down to a simmer for the mysterious “La Valse.” Gabriel was wonderful in the zesty “Brandenburg,” opposite an equally zippy Emma von Enck. He looked less comfortable in his surprise “Sonatine” debut, understandably. He danced opposite Woodward, one of the warmest presences in the company, but even her generous smiles couldn’t quite ease the tension in his shoulders and neck. He was thrown into this role last-minute, however, so I bet he’ll settle into it quickly.
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