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Something Old, Something New

Doug Varone and Dancers celebrated its 40th anniversary at the Joyce this final week of May with a time-honored formula—“something old and something new.” For “something old,” the company performed Varone’s eloquent, Bessie award-winning “Boats Leaving” (2006) set to Arvo Pärt’s score, “Te Deum.” The meditative score, a choral masterpiece based on an early Christian hymn, sonically bathes the flow of sculpted images with a sense of timelessness. At its core, “Boats Leaving” is about community—and all that engenders, including dissolution.

Performance

Doug Varone and Dancers: “Boats Leaving” and “No Matter What the End” by Doug Varone

Place

The Joyce Theater, New York, NY, May, 2026

Words

Karen Greenspan

Courtney Barth, Ryan Yamauchi, Dareon Blowe in Doug Varone and Dancers' 40th anniversary performance. Photograph by Kevin Colton

This work is distinctly sculptural in the way Varone molds bodies together into tableaux within space to produce enduring images—archetypes of today. The work begins with eight still, standing bodies dispersed to fill the stage, backgrounded by a blue-lit backdrop. The subtle lighting by Jane Cox initially holds the figures in dimness. 

As the separate bodies come together, golden-tinged light illuminates the dancers’ faces. They quickly move apart and again reconfigure, continually changing and moving through space. They begin to gesture a legible language—three dancers raise fists in unity, a group folds their arms across their chests forming a wall of judgement, a woman covers her mouth while she clasps her gut. Then, with handshakes and a reach toward another’s arm or shoulder, a feeling of interdependence emerges and they form a circle. They disperse and form a diagonal. They disperse and form another line… and another. Eventually everyone falls faced down, inching forward on bellies only to retreat backward. They merge, straining to boost each other upright, some remaining on the ground to serve as support for others. Assuming a variety of postures, the group strains forward—arms, heads, and gaze pointing toward a communal goal. 

The energy swells with jumping, lifting, twirling—calling up images of Winslow Homer’s boats tossed in turbulent waters or migrants clutching each other in overcrowded dinghies seeking safe shores. The images strike emotional chords; they feel current. Varone, in the post-show curtain chat, shared, “The piece was built with specifics but also with ambiguity so that everyone can find their own meaning.” In a YouTube video from the company archives, Varone described those specifics. In 2005, Varone, searching to spark a new creative process for this work, picked up the day’s newspaper and began looking for striking photographs. The dancers brought the photographic images to life, imbuing some 60 of them with embodied physicality and spatial relationships. Varone later layered Arvo Pärt’s religious score onto the movement. 

Varone, a recognized master choreographer (recipient of 11 Bessies and renowned for mentoring emerging artists in the craft), builds a classic scaffolding for this dance. The choreographic leitmotifs—the circle, the gestures, the diagonal—reprised multiple times, ground us in a (loose) narrative. The eight dancers come across as real people. At any given moment they slip from everyday humanness into a casual gesture or a full outpouring of dancing virtuosity—giving the dance its power to tug at our own humanity.  

Then Varone dissolves the dance with poignant grace. The dancers form their circle. They disperse and form a diagonal toward the upstage right corner. With sacred formality, two dancers turn around to face the row behind them, and stepping apart, they form a gateway for the others to pass through. Then the final two dancers re-form the line and depart. 

Doug Varone and Dancers in “No Matter What the End” by Varone. Photograph by Scott Suchman

Doug Varone and Dancers in “No Matter What the End” by Varone. Photograph by Scott Suchman

For “something new,” the company performed its New York premiere of “No Matter What the End,” set to 10 songs from Radiohead’s iconic album, In Rainbows. The work, originally intended to premiere a month ago (in April) at the Kennedy Center, instead debuted at nearby George Mason University in Fairfax, VA, offering the performance to the community free of charge. 

I am not usually a fan of dances to popular music. Nonetheless, the full-throttle dancing and insightful character and relationship studies thoroughly held my interest. Caitlyn Taylor’s costumes of bohemian hodge podge and Ben Stanton’s colorful lighting add to the vibe of casual liveliness.

A duet for Dareon Blowe and Ryan Yamauchi presents a relationship that volleys between tenderness and aggression. They initiate a slow dance with only their heads leaning against each other—no hand holding. In moments, they are tussling on the floor—pushing and goading each other. Pressing body against body, they push each other upright and clasp hands like best friends and goose step around the stage together. Their relationship dynamics ping-pong back and forth until they lope off the stage together. In another duet, Courtney Barth and Nicholas Ruscica roll onto the stage, a disconnected couple. They proceed through a sad comedy of mis-attempts at connection. Stumbling about with stiff, wooden movements, they are incapable of yielding to a soft embrace. After collapsing to the floor, they manage to intertwine their rigidly angled body parts and finally merge. Then Barth somehow lifts Ruscica off the floor and drags him off.

Once again, Varone proves himself to be a master of endings. The full company lines up horizontally downstage, their backs to the audience. Each dancer takes a turn dancing into a cone of brilliant light further upstage. But their dance is not for us to see; they are hidden by the downstage wall of dancers. After their moment in the light, each performer steps upstage into the unlit space to groove along. Dareon Blowe and Ryan Yamauchi re-enter the light and reprise their slow dance—first leaning their heads against each other, then clasping in a formal slow dance pose, and finally, they just grab hands and run off.

Karen Greenspan


Karen Greenspan is a New York City-based dance journalist and frequent contributor to Natural History Magazine, Dance Tabs, Ballet Review, and Tricycle among other publications. She is also the author of Footfalls from the Land of Happiness: A Journey into the Dances of Bhutan, published in 2019.

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