Feathers Flying
In a world where Tchaikovsky meets Hans Christian Andersen, circus meets dance, ducks transform and hook-up with swans, and of course a different outcome emerges.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
Birth + Carnage” is a fantastic title. The premise behind this show, which premiered at LaMama Experimental Theater Club at the end of December, was exciting too. It was born from a collaboration between choreographer Marla Phelan and astrophysicist Dr. Blakesley Burkhart, who teamed up at Open Interval, a residency jointly funded by the Simons Foundation and Gibney Center. Phelan prefaced the work by saying: “I’m fascinated by how the smallest gesture can mirror the movements of galaxies—how every heartbeat is a kind of cosmic echo. This work lives in that overlap between the cellular and the celestial.” Beautifully put. Dance would seem to be the perfect vehicle to elucidate Carl Sagan’s famous line, “we are made of star stuff,” with human bodies in motion analogizing the movements of planetary bodies.
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In a world where Tchaikovsky meets Hans Christian Andersen, circus meets dance, ducks transform and hook-up with swans, and of course a different outcome emerges.
PlusMao Zedong’s famous statement that women hold up half the sky may sound poetic and even liberating.
PlusThe men are already on stage when the audience filters into the theater. Some stand stretching at the ballet barres, aligned in neat rows, and others move around, jumping, swinging their legs, lunging.
PlusThe questions that the choreographic duo known as Baye & Asa set out to answer in their in-progress work, “At the Altar” may or may not be rhetorical: Who or what do we worship? How do we worship? Who are the righteous? Who are the blasphemous?
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