The Battery Fest is also wonderfully accessible. If you can get yourself to the Northern tip of Rockefeller Park, you can plop your butt down anywhere on the grass for free—no advance registration, no waiting in line, no fussiness. Bring your kids, bring a picnic, snap pics, film the show on your phone—it’s all fine. You can scan a barcode for a comprehensive online program, or visit the thorough website, or you can also simply listen as each dance and the pertinent casting is announced between numbers. It’s the most easygoing festival around. Since Covid, the shows have been livestreamed for free as well. If you sign up for one program at home, you get access to them all for 10 days past the event. I enjoyed the spellbinding August 15th performance, featuring all Indian dance, at my home a week after it happened. And I took my family to see the final performance of the week in person, on what might have been the most beautiful evening of the year. My unruly little sons jumped and danced along at times and then ignored the stage completely for their toys and snacks at others. Nobody minded, and I was thrilled by the opportunity to casually expose them to many different styles of dance while enjoying a lovely summer night right on the water.
The program began with the NYC premiere of Adriana Ogle and Toru Sakuragi’s “Softly as in a Morning Glow—extended set,” which was billed as a “living piece.” Ogle began choreographing this dance in 2012; it has been expanded and amended numerous times since then. DJ Nkosi Edwards cued up tunes by John Coltrane, Cab Calloway, and Freddie Hubbard for four tappers—Addi Loving, Ogle, Funmilayo Sofola, and Tommy Wasiuta. The hoofers also danced a cappella. The vibe was old-timey and joyous. I liked the Wizard of Oz heel clicks. In one section, each dancer took a turn soloing while the other three tapped in supportive lockstep behind them, as breezy as a Motown backup trio. Amanda Treiber’s “Wind-Up” showcased another blithe quartet—but this one sported pointe shoes instead of taps. New York City Ballet’s Victor Abreu was joined by Alexis Branagan, Guilia Faria, and Monica Limo of the New York Theater Ballet for larkish flocking and flits to piano preludes by Ryan Anthony Francis. Branagan performed a particularly sprightly solo. These first two works were pleasant and complementary.
Always a fan of your writing—thanks for taking us there.