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A Dance for All

Company Grande, a new dance theater project from the Saitama Arts Foundation triumphed in their recent production, “The Rite of Spring.” Continuing SAF’s decades-long commitment to uniting the community and performing arts, the initiative started two years ago with an open call for auditions. Company Grande accepted over 100 participants of all ages and abilities from across Japan.

Performance

Company Grande: “The Rite of Spring,” a Saitama Arts Foundation production

Place

Words

Kris Kosaka

Over the last eighteen months, company members attended various dance and theater workshops, including improvisation, shadow-puppetry and juggling, leading up to last week’s production directed by dancer and choreographer, Ryohei Kondo. Kondo is Saitama Arts Theater’s artistic director and founder of the popular all-male dance group, Condors. 

The mesmerizing two hours onstage emphatically proved that performance art needn’t be limited to professional artists. The lights rise on a stage strewn with discarded clothing. Two backdrops mirror this conceit with colorful jackets, pants or tops draped and crowded haphazardly across the backdrops. A cavernous tunnel at one side hints at passages through time or space. 

Part one, “The Calling,” unfolds as a series of vignettes, thematically linked to the calling towards spring. Kondo starts the performance by playing the accordion to accompany one female dancer until suddenly the stage fills with dancers: united in the choreography, they are the antithesis of a corps—a diverse and inclusive group, they are uniform in their lack of uniformity. Their chanting is complemented by simple beats to provide sound. It was a powerfully engaging opening. 

At turns humorous and wry, contemplative or whimsically elegant, each segment transitioned into the next with seamlessly. True to their ethos of inclusivity, a sign language interpreter, Tomomi Komatsu, translated the spoken words and songs. 

A backdrop rose to reveal live musicians who performed through several scenes. Highlights include a percussion dance, where performers beat hand-held drums in time to intricate movements in their weaving, circular formation. Six more performers emerged suddenly from the audience searching for “Stravinsky,” and they later took the stage for a faux game-show featuring punning word play. 

There was a delicate solo where a young dancer, wearing a crown of green leaves, evoked the season. A group of dancers performed with chairs, recalling to mind the endless days spent chained to desks or schoolrooms. Later, dozens of dancers moved slowly across the stage, engrossed in black stones they each lovingly balanced on different body parts, a quiet commentary on our modern digital addictions. 

Part Two, “Rite of Spring” opened to a minimal stage, the backdrops now removed. One dancer walks forward down a long pier and smoothly bends his torso to unfold his legs upwards into a handstand. A crowd enters, single file, looping across the stage as he holds his pose. 

Clothing becomes a motif as each dancer wears a costume representing an era or occupation, like a police officer, nurse, a kimono-clad housewife or a suited salaryman. Taken together, the artistic vision of the production becomes clear: “The Calling” as a representation of humanity’s day to day, “The Rite of Spring” as unveiling our move towards the worlds in between. 

Interspersed between short, choreographed scenes, ominous figures in black feature. Mysterious lights twinkle at the back of the stage. In a dignified finale, as the pier leads off into a distant doorway and we are left, once again, with the upside-down man, alone on the stage. 

Ten artists came together to shepherd this stunning vision to fruition, and accolades to each and every dancer who contributed to this inspiring production. Kondo as a director is known for his astute stagecraft and storytelling, and he’s proved his creative touch infects everyone he works with, regardless of level. This wasn’t just excellent community dance theater; it was outstanding theater. 

Kris Kosaka


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