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Refuge and Resistance

In a week of humanitarian crisis, of bodies mobilised and menaced, what a privilege it’s been to take refuge in art that radiates integrity, conviction and splendour. Here in London we’ve had Paul Taylor Dance Company giving their first UK performances in more than two decades, passionately channelling the luminosity of their late founder, a star of American modern dance. Where some of Taylor’s contemporaries leaned into the cool and the calculated, he consistently chased warmth, refracting it through his dances like sunbeams for the heart. The pieces on tour here—six flavourful picks, spread over two triple bills—aren’t just a distraction from the horrors but an antidote, speaking to the unsaid and throwing light on the unseen. Basking in them feels like resistance in the most unexpected form.

Performance

Paul Taylor Dance Company: Programme A: “Brandenburgs” / “Under the Rhythm” / “Piazzolla Caldera Programme B: Concertiana” / “Echo” / “Esplanade”

Place

Linbury Theatre, Royal Opera House, London, January 27 & 28, 2026

Words

Sara Veale

Elizabeth Chapa and Paul Taylor Dance Company in Paul Taylor's “Esplanade.” Photograph by Hisae Aihara

We open and close with the uplifting strings of Bach. 1988’s “Brandenburgs”—set to a pair of concertos from a like-titled collection—spotlights the retrospective quaintness of mid-century modern dance, with its politely sprung leaps and gently summoned lines. The men of the ensemble trace elegant circles around female soloists, everyone dressed in hunter green; John Harnage steps forward shirtless, a faun at the forest’s edge. Courtly spins, dipping arabesques and beatific smiles match the tidy cheer of the music, itself a product of aristocratic legacy (Bach devised it for an eighteenth-century Prussian margrave).

But what looks genteel on the surface belies the sculpted brawn of the dancers’ physiques, hard won through regimented training and the veiled demands of Taylor’s choreography. As the piece progresses, those muscles flex mightily in service of springing sissonnes, darting exits, tight spins like twirling teacups, arms upraised and palms upturned, all calibrated to exude elation rather than toil. 

John Harnage and Maria Ambrose in Paul Taylor's “Brandenburgs.” Photograph by by Ron Thiele

John Harnage and Maria Ambrose in Paul Taylor's “Brandenburgs.” Photograph by by Ron Thiele

A similar backdoor athleticism fuels “Esplanade,” Taylor’s celebrated 1975 masterwork set to a series of Bach’s violin concertos, bursting the seams of its pedestrian framing (an ode to a woman running for a bus). What starts as buoyant turns explosive—dives and rolls busting forth like fireworks, skirts and ponytails flying. Tenderness persists across this sea change, sometimes rendered romantically, sometimes through friendly exchange. Madelyn Ho and Devon Louis are especially spry.

Taylor was a dynamo of ensemble work, finding gripping notes of cohesion outside of simple unison (although there’s some of that here too, and it’s unfailingly tight-knit). “Concertiana,” his final creation before his death in 2018, epitomises his flair for synchronicity, the troupe stretching, sprinting and skittering with the cohesion of pack animals. They roll downstage like turtles fresh from the egg, bound like springboks crossing the savannah. Reptilian in shiny teal and black, they strike an organic unity, even when navigating complex helices and tricky syncopations. Joy, melancholy and rumination bleed together like a Rothko gradient, a motif helped along by vivid, fluctuating colourscapes on the backcloth.

With its notes of reflection and rapture, “Echo,” a 2023 work from resident choreographer Lauren Lovette, plucks a similar chord as these canon pieces while also making space to contemplate its central theme—masculinity—from a contemporary perspective. Wearing jagged black skirts from designer Zac Posen, the all-male cast convenes and disassembles, their interactions shaded with tinges of confrontation and companionship. Lee Duvenek is a central force, deftly straddling the dichotomies that collide here: animal heat versus human reserve; the earthly and the divine. Bare-chested and crouching, his fist to his face, Rodin’s Thinker-style, he lithely finds his way beyond the binary. Kevin Puts’s score, intense and pensive, is a dynamic match.

Jessica Ferretti and Devon Louis “Under the Rhythm” by Robert Battle. Photograph by Ron Thiele

Jessica Ferretti and Devon Louis “Under the Rhythm” by Robert Battle. Photograph by Ron Thiele

Robert Battle, formerly of Alvin Ailey and now at PTDC, brings us the other guest-choreographed piece of the tour, “Under the Rhythm,” which melds bluegrass, gospel, jazz, stepping and doo-wop to thunderous effect. Think honking brass, bowler hats and drop splits, with lots of room for individual expression. Shimmies and the hambone jostle against giddy two-steps from the speakeasy. Patrick Gamble cools things down with his central solo, a slow and spiritual about-face that casts the preceding antics in a suddenly unserious light. Fast-forward to two men in red tuxedos racing to keep up with gunfire scatting from Ella Fitzgerald. There’s a shrewdly drawn violence to their sudden drops and rictus grins, the droll, can’t-keep-a-man-down mask slipping to reveal an ugly underbelly to their vaudevillian gurning. Every twist and turn compels.

“Piazzolla Caldera,” while atmospheric, doesn’t reach the same heights as its companions, physically or expressively. There’s much pelvic thrusting and feline strutting in this tango-inspired foray, which channels “West Side Story” with its preening women and the finger-clicking men who pursue them. The choreography stretches out like an ellipsis, drifting in a wistful, sultry haze. The partnering is a touch unwieldy but, like the programme as a whole, danced with assurance and bright, ineffable charisma.

Sara Veale


Sara Veale is a London-based writer and editor. She's a member of the UK Dance Critics' Circle and has written about dance for the Observer, the Spectator, Harper's Bazaar, Auditorium, Gramophone and more. Her book, Wild Grace: The Untamed Women of Modern Dance, was published by Faber in 2025.

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