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United Dancing Nations

Program Four of the 22nd annual Fall for Dance Festival opened with an odd expression of gratitude: “thank you for going through all that you went through to get here,” Michael S. Rosenberg, the President and CEO of New York City Center, told the crowd. The 80th session of the UN General Assembly had shut down much of midtown (even to pedestrians), including the block of 55th street that is home to City Center. Audience members had to snake through the atrium from 56th street to enter the theater. No matter, New Yorkers are intrepid. The house was still packed.

Performance

Fall for Dance Festival: Program 4 - BalletBC in Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber’s “Obsidian” / pdd from “Romeo and Juliet” by Rudi Van Dantzig / The Social Tango Project

Place

New York City Center, New York, NY, September 2025

Words

Faye Arthurs

BalletBC in Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber’s “Obsidian.” Photograph by Steven Pisano

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The logjam wasn’t the only issue. Rosenberg also announced that this was, “the most international festival we have ever produced. We are truly bringing you the world’s best.” Indeed, the three companies represented on the program were all foreign, hailing from Canada, the Netherlands, and Argentina. Many of the dancers were from other countries yet, like Olga Smirnova (Russia) and Jacopo Tissi (Italy), massive stars who defected from the Bolshoi in protest of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Rosenberg spoke with pride, but after Donald Trump kicked off the UN week with a speech about the failure of open borders, it was hard to feel anything other than dread. Multicultural events like this are currently at risk. 

Ballet BC, based in Vancouver, opened the program with the NY premiere of Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber’s “Obsidian,” which was very much a “world’s best” showcase. It was the best Smith and Schraiber piece I’ve seen, with a terrific cast and a fabulously folksy piano score—by George Gurdjieff and Thomas de Hartmann—played beautifully onstage by Perri Lo. Smith and Schraiber’s vocabulary consisted of finnicky gestures, violent layouts, sensual floorwork, and tense ballroom holds, as usual. In many of their works, the choreography gets so specifically gestural that it becomes impenetrable. In “Obsidian,” however, the hand jives were well integrated and they suited the peasant themes in the score—which included song titles like “Kurd Shepherd Dance,” “Song of the Fisherwomen”  and “Struggle of the Magicians.” 

Trios held hands high and performed riffs on the hora. There were traditional heel digs, thigh slaps, and grapevines. But there were also quirkier moves, like a dance for two men—Joziah German and Orlando Harbutt, both excellent—in which they audibly brushed their hands against each other’s shoulders, legs, backs. This interesting duet, set to a laid-back march, was half affectionate and half combative. Some of their brushoffs and blocking moves resembling taekwondo. Eduardo Jimenez Cabrera, wearing a suit, entered and joined hands with them in a huge frog leap that sank to the floor and back up smoothly. It was wonderfully arresting. Later, Cabrera ditched his jacket and performed a snaky, nonstop solo. But he could be sharp when he wanted to be, as when he aggressively grabbed his crotch to hoist himself off the floor in a seated pike.

An emotional, flinging pas de deux for Vivian Ruiz and Harbutt opened the work. Ruiz lovingly caressed Harbutt’s butt before yanking his leg so hard he was pulled up from the ground. At the end, they circled their pelvises while joined at the hipbones. Then they drifted apart while still gyrating. Stellar performers both, they sold the idea of a relationship that was more of a physical addiction than a spiritual connection. This pas and a few other sexually raw, but wry, moments reminded me of Pina Bausch, as did the casual separates and simple dresses (also by Smith and Schraiber) and the social interactions in silence.   

Olga Smirnova and Jacopo Tissi in Rudi Van Dantzig’s pas de deux from “Romeo and Juliet.” Photograph by Steven Pisano

Following a pause, the incredibly beautiful ex-Bolshoi members Smirnova and Tissi tried to sell Rudi Van Dantzig’s so-so version of the “Romeo and Juliet” balcony pas de deux. One problem they faced was that there was no balcony, just a little fence on a low platform that made it seem like Smirnova was dreaming of her lover from a suburban backyard patio (the scenery and costumes were by Toer Van Shayk). Their easy proximity on the small City Center stage gave them nothing much to do in the first few entrances, but the weirdest part was the silence. Shockingly, especially for a FFD crowd, there was no entrance applause for either dancer. Just a lot of dead time to run around and pretend not to see each other.

Though the choreography and canned music did this pair no favors, their natural talents shone through. Tissi’s perfect lines and smooth partnering were lovely. He managed the overhead, planked corpse press (hands on her upper spine and one leg) well—though that awkward lift would have been better suited to the tomb pas de deux.  As in her “Giselle” with American Ballet Theater in June, Smirnova captivated with her unusual port de bras. She often locked her elbows and let her wrists break with splayed, stick fingers—everything they tell you not to do in ballet class. Yet somehow, she makes it look delicately expressive.  

The Social Tango Project debut at the Fall for Dance Festival. Photograph by Steven Pisano

The Social Tango project brought the NY premiere of “Social Tango Project” to close out the night. This dance/play/film was about the acceptance and community of Argentine milongas. Its story of a shy young woman learning to tango was sweet, and the images of Argentina cast on a scrim (including grand plazas, tiny balconies dripping with rain, and trees so old and gnarled their root systems resembled flamenco bata de colas) were thoughtfully chosen. The onstage musicians were fun too (Horacio Romo on the bandoneon was particularly exciting). 

One section featured a tango lesson, in which people of all ages and sizes joined the core cast. The inclusion was awesome, though the segment—which used filler music—ran quite long. I couldn’t help thinking of that old Carnegie Hall adage. You are supposed to “practice, practice, practice” to get there, not once you get there. My favorite part was a clip of three geriatric tango devotees discussing how dancing saved them from loneliness and kept them feeling young and vital. They pointed out how the milonga tradition breaks down age, wealth, and class borders. (Damn did it feel good to celebrate the erosion of borders on this night!) The casting supported this, with both same-sex and cross-generational matchups. “You have to embrace everyone,” one man said, and he meant it quite literally. The way these dancers nestled into each other’s arms at the top of each number was heartwarming. This wasn’t the world’s best tango, but that was the point. The message was that tango was for everyone, just like Fall for Dance. For now, anyway.            

Faye Arthurs


Faye Arthurs is a former ballet dancer with New York City Ballet. She chronicled her time as a professional dancer in her blog Thoughts from the Paint. She graduated summa cum laude with a B.A. in English from Fordham University. She lives in Brooklyn with her partner and their sons.

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