Firebird Rising
Long before the dancers take the stage, Dance Theatre of Harlem’s season at New York City Center feels like one of the most energizing cultural events of the spring.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
A gifted satirist, Jane Comfort’s dance theater productions are razor sharp and wickedly indelible. Take, for instance, the evening length “Beauty” (2012), with its robotic Barbie beauty contest. Or, “S/he” (1995), a cross gender/race reversed treatment of the Clarence Thomas/Anita Hill hearings. For her new “The Gulf of America” about immigration, the choreographer plays her subject straight, limiting her sense of irony to the title. Referring to the renaming of Gulf of Mexico, it raises a secondary meaning for gulf—that of deep chasm—an apt descriptor for the current US political state. The 20-minute work features music by Heather Christian, with lyrics from TS Eliot’s famous poem, “The Wasteland,” and an ambitious fight scene. The evening also reprises two shorter works from the company’s archives—both are entertaining examples of Comfort’s style and range.
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Long before the dancers take the stage, Dance Theatre of Harlem’s season at New York City Center feels like one of the most energizing cultural events of the spring.
Continue ReadingWhen we think of countries that have shaped the world of dance our mind will often drift to the United States, Russia, or Germany. But what of Luxembourg?
Continue ReadingIn times of rapid change, predicting the road ahead can seem to be a fool’s errand. But on a spring afternoon at Lincoln Center, I feel confident in this assertion: the future of dance is very bright.
Continue ReadingThe programme of the Paris Opera Ballet School’s annual show for 2026 is shaped by a return to origins. Compared with recent editions, what stands out is its pronounced tendency to look backwards, less through canonical classics than through the recreation of an idealised past.
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