Make no mistake: While each individual dancer shone—and generally smiled throughout, something a Beatles’ tune can do to a listener—as a unit, they soared. Call it the Cult of Morris, who’s had his finger on the pulse of more than just music—no pun intended—but also has a way of making us see the world in a different way through his gestural choreography and its relation to a lived life.
As for the set, Johan Henckens created a rear bank of small, crushed aluminum-like mountains (an homage, perhaps, to Warhol’s famed silver pillows?), their reflections changing colors with the lighting, which also served as wonderful transitions into songs, the upbeat nature of “Penny Lane,” for example, which seemed to call out for the audience to hum along.
Indeed, Chris McCarthy’s arpeggiated harpsichord runs had shades of Bach, and co-mingled with the jazzy sounds of trumpeter Garchik, which were then reflected by—what this reviewer likes to call—the body scatting of the dancers. Seeming to personify the spirit of a jivey New Orleans, the movers deployed split jumps and barrel turns, while a backwards shoulder-to-shoulder gambit featuring Sarah Haarmann, Brian Lawson, Nicole Sabella, Dallas McMurray, Mica Bernas and Durell Comed, gave new meaning to the words “human archway.”
With the penultimate number, the haunting, “A Day in the Life,” Rob Schwimmer made the most of the theremin (an ingenious touch), as Iverson offered a kind of cocktail lounge accompaniment segueing into Curtis accentuating the words, “I heard the news today.”
Next level, the music, replete with tinges of melancholy, was a reminder that the ’60s, rife with political killings, rioting, and Vietnam, was also the era of Free Love, flower power and those four Liverpudlians crooning, “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” the reprise bringing the concert to an epic close.
Sure, the world is not exactly a repository of nirvana today, but we can always turn to the Beatles—and the wondrous grooviness of dance, especially when performed by the Mark Morris Dance Group—for a bit of solace.
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