What made this dance truly profound, however, was the lighting. I caught a 3pm showing, so I can’t speak to any sundial effects at the noon shows, but by the late-afternoon an ever-encroaching diagonal shaft of light filtered through the skyscrapers onto the stage floor, wondrously echoing the hypotenuse theme present in the music, the choreography, and the costuming. The dancers were uncannily involved with the light’s journey throughout the piece, as when Jacobson moved up and down along the corridor of light with variations on the skipping sauté.
The glowing channel crept steadily upstage during the half-hour long dance, until it transformed from a pathway into a bisecting line, with the top triangle of the stage fully sunlit and the bottom triangle cast in complete shadow. The work ended with the dancers on either side of this demarcation, breaking them and the stage into a naturally occurring yin/yang symbol. The effect was both mathematical and godly. To the singers’ exalted aaahing, the pair took hands across the boundary, raised them up together, then let them part and fall as they stood on opposite sides of the divide. Implausibly, the best lighting design I’ve seen in ages can be credited to the natural tilt and rotation of the Earth in conjunction with the gap between 10 Rockefeller Center and the Nintendo Store.
“A Dance for Two” was intended to be viewed in the round, but the biggest crowd formed between the Chamberlain sculptures and the makeshift stage, which made the New York Gifts souvenir shop along 48th Street (featuring giant signage lettering with a heart instead of an “O” in York and a Statue of Liberty instead of an “I” in the word Gifts) into an ironically ideal backdrop. Keychains and tchotchkes be damned, miraculous New York moments like this are the city’s real gifts.
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