Country Music and Line Dancing
In general, one knows exactly what to expect of a Pam Tanowitz piece. There will be deconstructed ballet and modern steps.
Plus
World-class review of ballet and dance.
Despite what Fox News wants the rest of the United States to believe about a “doom loop” in San Francisco, the reality in many of the city’s neighborhoods refuses to fit the media spin. Jackson Square is one of these stubbornly beautiful neighborhoods, approximately eight blocks of lovingly preserved nineteenth-century buildings nestled between the TransAmerica Pyramid, North Beach, and the Embarcadero waterfront. Walking these stately streets, you feel history reaching back to the 1849 Gold Rush. Less obvious is the history of gay counterculture, rooted here decades before the Castro District at venues like the Black Cat Café, the Gay ‘N Frisky, and the Hippodrome. This is the history that RAWdance chose to bring to life at the Jackson Square gallery 836M in “Loving Still,” a series of steamy and tender up-close duets that drew shy giggles and warm applause.
Performance
Place
Words
“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”
Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.
Already a paid subscriber? Login
In general, one knows exactly what to expect of a Pam Tanowitz piece. There will be deconstructed ballet and modern steps.
PlusWhen I think of the desert, the first impression that comes to mind if of unrelenting heat, stark shadows, the solitude of vast space, occasional winds, and slowness.
PlusTwo works, separated by a turn of the century. One, the final collaboration between Bill T. Jones and Arnie Zane; the other, made 25 years after Zane’s death.
PlusLast December, two works presented at Réplika Teatro in Madrid (Lucía Marote’s “La carne del mundo” and Clara Pampyn’s “La intérprete”) offered different but resonant meditations on embodiment, through memory and identity.
Plus
comments