Was I really one of the doomed ancestors
Stranded to die on a foreign planet, or was I
The microscopic descendants they designed.
World-class review of ballet and dance.
Inspired by her fascination with microphotography, Noelle Kayser’s “Scales on the Wings of a Butterfly” at BalletX’s midsummer series opened with a pyramid of 16 bodies under Drew Billiau’s shadowed lighting. I sensed a collective intake of breath from the full audience at the Susanne Roberts Theatre as the dancers began slowly melting away from the pile, emerging as individual creatures. Kaleidoscopically colored body suits by Amanda Gladu gave them an insectile look, camouflaged, as they would be in nature. As the second piece on the program, the bridge piece, it was the most memorable.
Performance
Place
Words
“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”
Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.
Already a paid subscriber? Login
Noé Soulier enters the space without warning, and it takes a few seconds for the chattering audience to register the man now standing before them, dressed simply in a grey t-shirt and black pants, barefoot.
Continue ReadingIn the first few seconds that the lights come up on BalletX at the Joyce Theater, an audience member murmurs her assent: “I love it already.”
Continue ReadingThe right foil can sharpen the distinct shapes of a choreographic work, making it appear more completely itself through the comparison of another.
Continue Reading“Was it Benjamin Franklin, that sagacious and witty man, who, on signing the Declaration of Independence that hot July day in 1776, admonished his colleagues that they had better hang together lest they all hang separately?
Continue Reading
comments