In 1963, the Graham Company was in its 37th year of existence and Graham herself 69. With decades of material to cover, Terry, in his interview, zeroed in on one particularly compelling feature of Graham’s work: her use of characters and specifically, complex female characters. It’s a smart way to find a central theme in Graham’s wide body of work. It also establishes a compelling theme for Move’s twenty-first-century reinvention of the more than 60-year old interview.
Through this hour-long performance—equal parts a play as it is a work of dance—Kron and Move, as their characters, discuss Graham’s approach to rendering figures like Medea, Clytemnestra, Phaedra, Jocasta, and the bride in “Appalachian Spring.” As Move explains the psyches of these characters, and how their psyches influence their movements, Cabeen and Chien-Pott emerge to portray, like visions, the works that are the subject at hand. Here, we see the way that Medea’s torso undulates and her knees, at times, quiver; how Clytemnestra reaches, pressing the heel of her hand forward. Both dancers are skilled technicians, but, more importantly, they execute Graham’s signature phrases with the intensity and commitment that they demand.
Cabeen and Chien-Pott perform these movements without musical accompaniment. In a way, their movement is the accompaniment to Kron and Move’s conversation—or vice versa. By their concentrated and controlled steps, in addition to the expression they bring to these famed characters, the dancers bring to life Graham’s legacy just as much as Move does in his depiction of the choreographer.
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