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French Jewels

It was a grand night of show and—well, show more—as eight members of L.A. Dance Project strutted their gorgeous, technically brilliant stuff in the US premiere of “Gems.” Seen at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts over the weekend (it had its world premiere last month at Australia’s Brisbane Festival), the triptych was choreographed by LADP founder Benjamin Millepied. Made between the years 2013 and 2016, the works, commissioned by the esteemed French jewelry company, Van Cleef & Arpels, and whose global Dance Reflections festival has been a boon to the art form, is a kind of twenty-first-century reimagining of George Balanchine’s “Jewels.”

Performance

Los Angeles Dance Project: “Gems” by Benjamin Millepied

Place

Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Beverly Hills, California, October 23-25

Words

Victoria Looseleaf

Courtney Conovan and Clay Koonar in “Reflections” by Benjamin Millepied. Photograph by Skye Varga

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Opening with “Reflections” and inspired by Mr. B’s “Rubies,” the opus featured Barbara Kruger’s dramatic, red and white word art—the text “Stay” looming large as the backdrop, while other common words were on the floor. Set to the music of Pulitzer Prize winner David Lang (selections from “This was Written by Hand/Memory Pieces”), with the minimalist score performed live by the wonderful pianist Yanfeng (Tony) Bai, the work oozed with feelings. 

From the first rapturous duet (Daphne Fernberger and Noah Wang), to push/pull relationships and ebullient coupling (Courtney Conovan and Clay Koonar), the work seemed to speak to our endless search—and need—for connections, the word ‘Go’ dropping down on a curtain midway through the number.

And did someone say solos? The extraordinary Shu Kinouchi not only seemed to own the air in his sky-high leaps, but also cut through it in astonishing ways, his undulating body super-charged as he appeared to elevate the space around him. Coming back from an injury sustained in February, Kinouchi has not lost a step, and, in fact, demonstrated power to burn, his partnering skills effortless, and his firebrand personality a perfect match with Lang’s penetrating chord clusters.

Originally created by Millepied and founding LADP members, the work is testament to stellar dancing, which also featured pirouettes galore, spidery pliés and jitterbuggy-type moves, with Kruger’s messaging an added way to ponder relationships, the shifting partnerships, playful yet pensive, a whirlwind of humanity.

Los Angeles Dance Project in “Hearts and Arrows” by Benjamin Millepied. Photograph by Skye Varga

From 2014, “Hearts & Arrows” featured Liam Gillick’s black and silver vertical lighting grids, with dancers sporting Janie Taylor’s spunky black-and white attire. Set to Philip Glass’s 1985 String Quartet No. 3 (“Mishima”), and deftly performed by musicians from the Colburn School (Taylor, a former LADP dancer is artistic director of the Trudy Zipper Dance Institute of Colburn), the work was inspired by Balanchine’s “Diamonds” and, true to the music, is a non-stop dance fest, the entire company, including Robert Hoffer, Hope Spears, Audrey Sides, and Wang dancing their, well, hearts out! 

 A fun-filled festive frolic, the work, punctuated by short blackouts (hopefully the tireless performers had a moment to swig some water,) featured a whirlwind of airplane arms, bent knees and back bends, and proved a perfect fit for Glass’s non-stop rhythmic motifs. Same sex partnering added to the vivace feeling, while an impressive circle, the group looking upwards while on bended knees, had a “Rite of Spring” quality. 

A true crowd-pleaser, “Hearts,” with its short vignettes and roundelay partnering, was a showcase for gazelle-like leaps, scissors kicks and arabesques thrown in for good measure, as these creatures of perpetual motion seemed to hold the music in their bodies. One gasp-worthy pas de deux had Kinouchi twirling Fernberger on the floor in a frenzied move akin to an ice skater’s death spiral. 

Shu Kinouchi and Daphne Fernberger in “On the Other Side” by Benjamin Millepied. Photograph by Skye Varga

 “On the Other Side,” its inspiration taken from emeralds, boasted a large Mark Bradford abstract backdrop that could have been an aerial view of L.A.’s freeways, or a mashup of Monet’s “Haystacks”—as if painted by Van Gogh—and a Giotto-esque homage to spatial construction. Again, set to Glass, but in a series of unconnected works, the dance featured the octet clad in Camille Assaf’s loose, comfy looking garb, while the performers dazzled, not only in sheer physicality, but in unending precision.

At one point, Conovan, a star among the LADP stars, was seen in a huge spotlight (Masha Tsimring designed lighting for the entire triptych), deploying twisty fierceness, her arms nothing less than those of Plisetskaya as the “Dying Swan,” her tall, lean physique aligned with the composer’s upward modulations, a beating heart come alive.

When the group gathered in a “Revelations’”-like pose, and slowly hoisted Conovan upwards, she could have been a phoenix rising, or a terpsichorean Statue of Liberty, her neo-classical countenance indeed “enlightening the world” with Emma Lazarus’ poetry ringing in this reviewer’s head, “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses…” so appropriate for this roiling political moment.

That would have made for a picturesque finale, but with more false endings than heard in a Beethoven symphony, the dance featured codas aplenty in what was already a marathon evening. And with trust at the core of the LADP ethos (as it must be in any dance troupe), the sea of steps continued: running, skipping, and featuring an abundance of backbending, these eight superhumans came together to hold hands. 

Could the program have been a wee bit shorter? Sure, but overall, “Gems,” is precisely what its name signifies: beauty, preciousness and polish, and ultimately signified that all is well on Planet Millepied. Merci, monsieur! 

Victoria Looseleaf


Victoria Looseleaf is an award-winning, Los Angeles-based international arts journalist who covers music and dance festivals around the world. Among the many publications she has contributed to are the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, Dance Magazine and KCET’s Artbound. In addition, she taught dance history at USC and Santa Monica College. Looseleaf’s novella-in-verse, Isn't It Rich? is available from Amazon, and and her latest book, Russ & Iggy’s Art Alphabet with illustrations by JT Steiny, was recently published by Red Sky Presents. Looseleaf can be reached through X, Facebook, Instagram and Linked In, as well as at her online arts magazine ArtNowLA.

comments

Rita

Fabulous review! Not a beat was missed! Thank you for your exquisite writing.

Rita

Fabulous review! Not a beat was missed! Thank you for your exquisite writing.

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