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Revise and Repeate

There is no such thing as a “Lucinda Childs vocabulary,” the choreographer herself clarifies in a pre-show talk with Gideon Lester, the artistic director and chief executive of Bard College’s Fisher Center. Inside the spectacular, Frank Gehry-designed building, the choreographer—who days before, celebrated her 86th birthday—is about two hours away from performing herself.

 

Performance

“Momentary Reprise” by Lucinda Childs

Place

Sosnoff Theater at Bard Fisher Center, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, June 28, 2026

Words

Rebecca Deczynski

Lucinda Childs in “Geranium ’64.” Photograph by Maria Baranova

She continues: “It’s a balletic vocabulary, adapted athletically for my group. What’s mine is a style.” Over the course of the five works presented this afternoon, the key tenets of that style couldn’t be more clearly articulated.

There’s the rejection of narrative, for one, and the incorporation of pedestrian modalities between passages of ballet steps. The torso nearly always retains a dancers’ strict standards of posture. There is a heightened awareness of space and how the dancers fill it, shifting in different formations. Repetition, too, is key—though phrases invariably shift in subtly altered permutations and build upon one another to create a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. Lester, in his conversation with Childs, mentions playwright Suzan-Lori Parks’s writing process of “repetition and revision.”

Over the course of five works—and two piano interludes by accompanist Anton Batagov—Childs presents a strong survey of her still-unfolding career (earlier this year, she was appointed choreographer-in-residence for New York City’s Gibney Company, for a five-year term). 

It begins with a newer piece, “Actus” (2024), which is set to a short, few-minutes long passage from Johann Sebastian Bach’s cantata  “Actus Tragius” (BWV 106). It is repeated four times—because of its brevity, Childs says—and features two dancers, Sharon Milanese and Caitlin Scranton, with the latter joining the former for the second and fourth play-throughs.

There is elegance in restraint: the dancers repeatedly step back into a fourth position, with their arms held in first arabesque. The balletic vocabulary which Childs noted is clearly visible, though it’s set on top of movement that, by its measured pacing, seems as natural as walking. Musicality, too, is key, as the dancers appear to bounce between notes, slipping into a soutenu en dehors. The same gestures (the arms in first arabesque, the pivot of the body to different directions) repeat across the entire work. The effect is that of a crystalline structure, which, the closer you look, appears to be made of infinite repeated patterns.

Caitlin Scranton and Sarah Hillmon in Lucinda Childs's “Field Dance 2.” Photograph by Maria Baranova

Caitlin Scranton and Sarah Hillmon in Lucinda Childs's “Field Dance 2.” Photograph by Maria Baranova

Childs herself performs “Geranium ’64” (2024), a reimagination of her 1965 solo of the same name. Across the stage stretches a gray wall, which, as the somber cello music (mixed by Olivier Goinard) comes in, appears to be cast in moving shadows or a wash of fog. Then, faint flickers of a football game come in, as does the Childs’s original accompaniment: radio broadcast of the 1964 NFL Championship game between the Cleveland Browns and the Baltimore Colts. Finally, Childs enters from stage right, wearing a utilitarian jumpsuit and holding onto a tethered cord. 

For the duration of her time onstage, Childs creeps across the stage diagonally, the cord allowing her to shift her body off balance. She’s walking, but with absolute presence and spacial awareness, occasionally twisting her torso and switching her grip on the cord. Intermittently, she turns her face to the audience and makes a remark about the football game whose broadcast is muffled. Often, she laughs to herself at the end of her commentary, which provokes a sprinkle of laughter through the audience. At the end, Childs makes her way to the floor and quickly tosses her legs, both bent, up against the wall. She stays in that position—a sort of abdominal hold—until the stage lights come down. I find myself thinking of the splay of limbs that some ballerinas employ at the end of “The Dying Swan.”

Childs’s 1983 collaboration with the composer John Adams and the architect Frank Gehry, “Available Light, Part 2” opens to a blank stage wall, with a slash of light illuminating the floor. (Bard’s Fisher Center is fittingly housed in a Gehry-designed building). The dancers, dressed in black, white, or red, follow repetitive phrases. They frequently piqué and sauté in arabesque, pivot in fourth position, and swirl their bodies around in renversé. They move with little to no port de bras. In examining the steps alone, it can seem like little changes. But the dancers also repeatedly shift the orientations of their bodies and pass into different formations. As Adams’s epic score grows more pronounced and the stage lights shift to red, the piece starts to feel trancelike—almost as if you’re gazing at a mandala. Against the beat-less music, the dancers create a clearly defined sense of order.

The same motifs repeat in the final numbers of the program. Repetition, the pairing of pedestrian steps with ballet, and the repeated shifts of the direction the dancers move establish the structure of “Field Dance 2,” from the 1984 Philip Glass opera “Einstein on the Beach” and “Distant Figure,” a 2024 work set to Glass’s work of the same name for piano. While these pieces share Childs’ elemental principles of choreography, they display differing levels of intensity.

Sharon Milanese, Lonnie Poupard Jr., Sarah Hillmon, Robert Mark Burke in Lucinda Childs's “Field Dance 2.” Photograph by Maria Baranova

Sharon Milanese, Lonnie Poupard Jr., Sarah Hillmon, Robert Mark Burke in Lucinda Childs's “Field Dance 2.” Photograph by Maria Baranova

“Field Dance 2” is the more aerobic of the two, with the eight dancers—dressed in grey sweatpants, white t-shirts, and white jazz shoes—turning and jumping with quick, light landings. They move within their own individual orbits (doing piqué turns back and forth, for instance) but are also deeply relational with the other dancers as they mirror one another and alternate different phrases of movement. The vocally driven accompaniment is alien and insistent, while a solo violin brings in flourishes that are reflected in the choreograph as fast, pivoting petit allegro. Stasis, in this piece, arrives in the form of a chassé topped off with a series of emboîtés.

While the work from “Einstein on the Beach” is translated as a continuous stream of energy, “Distant Figure” is more restrained, with six dancers, largely moving within two groups, shift into a series of poses that are almost Grecian in style: one evokes an ancient discus player, while another twists the torso in a frieze-ready fashion. These motions are simple, yet refined. 

The piece does build, though. One section brings the dancers in pairs, with one fan-kicking over the other’s back, then hooking their arms together and moving clockwise in a circle. Again, there is a machine-like sense of propulsion here. Yet even in the most mathematical choreography Childs finds a kind of perfect ratio: of humanistry, artisty, and technique.

Rebecca Deczynski


Rebecca Deczynski is a New York City-based writer and editor publishes the newsletter Mezzanine Society. Her work has appeared in publications including Inc., Domino, NYLON, and InStyle. She graduated from Barnard College cum laude with a degree in English and a minor in dance.

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