Or not. “Sextet,” which opened the all-Twyla program, was a company premiere. But one with ABT roots: it was made for four ABT dancers (including current Artistic Director Susan Jaffe) and two New York City Ballet dancers in 1992. Stylistically, it fit into ABT’s repertory as if it were a tailor-made mashup. With its technical hurdles and deshabille look, it was like a combination of the company’s many pyrotechnic codas and boudoir pas de deux (as in the full-length “Manon,” “Romeo and Juliet,” “Onegin,” etc.). Catherine Hurlin, sensational, was half Tatiana and half Odile in her lacy, corseted teddy. Red tendrils of hair escaped her bun as she rolled her shoulders and fouetté-ed furiously. (Throughout the evening, the oddball yet flattering costumes were by Tharp’s frequent collaborator Santo Loquasto.)
The score was a mix of tango tunes by Colin Jacobsen, Café Tacuba, and Ljova, which Tharp accentuated with ballroom holds, leg flicks, leans, and dips. Hurlin, nicely paired with the talented Joseph Markey, placed a hand on her chest and threw her head back in ecstasy. She wasn’t the only one with sensually euphoric moments: Skylar Brandt and Jake Roxander repeated a partnered second position with her pelvis thrusting forward, and Breanne Granlund planted her feet in fourth position with her head back and arms open during her pas de deux with Daniel Camargo. Tharp really put the sex in “Sextet.”
But in addition to all the beckoning and intimate waltzing there were myriad technical challenges, so much so that the dance often resembled ballet class spaghetti. The cacophony of tricks and tangoing was borderline overwhelming at times, but then the music would drop out and “Sextet” refocused. The small, hardworking cast was terrific in this long, challenging piece.
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