This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

For Now I am Winter

For the second work of its 2017 fall season, BalletX returned to the newly spruced up Wilma Theater with a reprise of a 2013 commission to internationally in demand choreographer, Nicolo Fonte’s “Beautiful Decay.” Two sets of well-known Philadelphia-based guest dancers alternate during the run. On seeing it the first time with Manfred Fischbeck and Brigitta Herrmann, years ago, and this time with Hellmut Fricke-Gottschild and Brenda Dixon Gottschild in the alternate cast, I find the title even more wincingly uncomfortable.

Performance

BalletX: “Beautiful Decay”

Place

Wilma Theater, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, November 29, 2017

Words

Merilyn Jackson

Skyler Lubin, Daniel Mayo, Gary W. Jeter II, Roderick Phifer in Nicolo Fonte's “Beautiful Decay.” Photograph by Bill Hebert

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.

Already a paid subscriber? Login

Decay means spoiling, rotting, falling apart. There certainly is nothing of the sort happening with the senior guest dancers. Sure, they are older and sure, we all begin to die from the moment we are born. But these elders are vividly alive, and if not kicking, still moving with grace and deliberation.

Perhaps 'Beautiful Decline' or 'Beautiful Descent' would have more elegantly encapsulated Fonte’s concept of aging out—a shared fear among dancers whose bodies and careers are prey to injury and aging. As for the Gottschilds, they’ve been touring their Lecture/Demonstration, “In Bodies We Trust—Tongue Smell Color Revisited,” internationally since its first iteration in 1999.

Fricke-Gottschild, now 80, was Mary Wigman’s last student and was hailed in Berlin when the duo performed it as an opening to Tanz Im August festival last summer. Author/performer Dixon Gottschild, has a glowing dark beauty and always seems about to burst into laughter. Dancer/choreographer Fricke-Gottschild helmed his own company, Zero-Moving until the early 90s and his ascetic body and faintly spiritual, yet playful smile is ever present. They’ve made a striking interracial couple since meeting while teaching at Temple University in the 1980s.

In Fonte’s work, they embodied all of those qualities onstage with utter precision, weaving through the ten sprightly young dancers, she in flowing blue pants, top, and he in a black suit with a white tee.

Although Pennsylvania Ballet’s resident choreographer, Matthew Neenan, is a co-founder of BalletX and frequent contributor to them, BalletX is a repertoire company much in the same league with Aspen-Santa Fe Ballet or Hubbard Street. Its current cast has been mellowing together for several years, with one exception. Richard Walters is a classical looking newcomer who danced with Hubbard Street II and fits the BalletX aesthetic very well.

It was good to see Skyler Lubin, the Grace Kelly of Philly dance, (I first met her in a gelato shop, after seeing her dance Marie in the “Nutcracker” when she was 11 years old!) back onstage after an injury sidelined her last year. And Fonte, as he likes to do, gave each of the cast a rich variety of individualized dance phrases in the show’s two halves.

The first opens with Tony-award winning MacArthur fellow, designer Mimi Lien’s dynamic set. Three metallic mesh skeletal structures jut out from the backdrop. They have rectangular openings through which the dancers leap, in solos, couples or various groupings in the three “rooms” created by the architecture. In Martha Chamberlain’s richly colored baroque-era costumes, they danced to excerpts from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, using the portals to traverse stages of life.

Here, the rapid dance phrases were mostly standard ballet steps with contemporary flourishes—running in place like Olympic speed skaters, for one. One lift had the female throwing her leg over the pelvis to twist her body over, while another male catches her foot and flips her back. Sometimes it looked just pretty but at others, there seemed something ominous.

Meanwhile the elder dancers look over their shoulders at the younger. Are they looking back at who they were? The most touching scene in this part of the narrative is Dixon Gottschild’s dreamy dance with her arms around a phantom lover.

After intermission, the set morphed into a translucent “room” off to one side, where the Gottschilds, sat on a bench hands in their laps, facing us through the screen. You had to wonder: what were they waiting for?

Chamberlain’s starkly contrasting black and white costumes and 30’s style flowered day dresses, took us to a darker era, not quite in the present, but closer than the previous baroque sensibility. The choreography here was more what I am used to in the many Fonte works I’ve seen: Fresh, sassy, able to shift moods and directions in a heartbeat. This created a stop action that suggests propulsion towards something—death, decay? In one short phrase all the dancers lean backwards arms outstretched as if falling in some cataclysm. They danced to Max Richter’s “Vivaldi Recomposed: Spring 1 Remix” and Ólafur Arnalds’s “For Now I Am Winter” in this latter half.

They change in and out of their costumes and footwear, some of the women en pointe from time to time and this busyness eradicated any sense of seamlessness to the work. There were memorable moments though. Daniel Mayo’s cool as ice solo, Zachary Kapeluck’s tender shadowing of Fricke-Gottschild’s expressively curved arms and placed hands, as if he were grasping objects only he could see. Gary W. Jeter II and Roderick Phifer brought elegant masculinity to their lifts. And Chloe Perkes, Francesca Forcella, Caili Quan and Andrea Yorita each brought their own style of femininity to their roles.

Beauty is a decision. One we must make each morning. And these dancers and their guests made all the right decisions.

Merilyn Jackson


Merilyn Jackson has written on dance for the Philadelphia Inquirer since 1996 and writes on dance, theater, food, travel and Eastern European culture and Latin American fiction for publications including the New York Times, the Warsaw Voice, the Arizona Republic, Phoenix New Times, MIT’s Technology Review, Arizona Highways, Dance, Pointe and Dance Teacher magazines, and Broad Street Review. She also writes for tanz magazin and Ballet Review. She was awarded an NEA Critics Fellowship in 2005 to Duke University and a Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Fellowship for her novel-in-progress, Solitary Host.

comments

Featured

Interwoven Threads
REVIEWS | Karen Hildebrand

Interwoven Threads

Dreadlocks are not the first thing that come to mind, looking at UK artist Nicola Turner’s fiber sculpture currently installed at Carvalho Park gallery in Bushwick. But I hesitate to open a review with a vision of the poop emoji.

Continue Reading
Borderline
REVIEWS | Victoria Looseleaf

Borderline

Inspired by breaking, neo-classical ballet and dance theater, Rubberband, founded in Montreal in 2002 by Victor Quijada, presented two works at BroadStage over the weekend in what was seen as a homecoming of sorts for Quijada.

Continue Reading
Art Under Attack
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

Art Under Attack

The Batsheva Dance Company returned to the BAM Opera House this week bringing their latest evening length work, “Momo.” This was the ninth Batsheva production that BAM has presented since 2002. New York City dance lovers packed the venue amid tight security and outdoor protestors to see this foremost contemporary dance company perform a masterpiece of haunting and reflective beauty.

Continue Reading
James Boyd, the Light Inside
TALKING POINTES | By Penelope Ford

James Boyd, the Light Inside

Today I have the immense privilege of speaking with Bangarra Dance Theatre’s James Boyd. James is a proud Aboriginal man with connections to the Kunja and Muruwari people of southwest Queensland. Born on Wiradjuri country in Orange, as a little boy, James wasn't quick to use his words, and had delayed speech. James's mum and dad then began to notice other things—James kept getting bruises. At just five years of age, James was diagnosed with Leukemia. In this most incredible episode, James shares his journey through cancer, the lows of hospital life, and also the highs when James was introduced...

Continue Reading
Good Subscription Agency