How “You” Become a Superhero
The epic emotion in Crystal Pite’s choreography
In Canadian choreographer Crystal Pite’s The You Show, dancers are superheroes. While they may not be literally scaling walls of burning buildings or flying through the night, they bear love and loss with the gusto of everyday champions.
At the U.S. Premiere of The You Show, which runs this Thursday and Friday at Baryshnikov Arts Center, Pite hopes audiences will absorb heroism and recognize it in their own personal stories of grace and power.
Pite’s dance company, Kidd Pivot Frankfurt RM, began in Canada but has recently taken up a 3-year residency in Frankfurt at Küstlerhaus Mousonturm
Originally a member of William Forsythe’s Ballet Frankfurt, Pite’s captivating perspective in recent pieces such as Dark Matter and The Tempest Replica have provoked both acclaim and curiosity.
February 21, 2012 No Comments
How “Leo” Walks on Walls
Inside the acrobatic magic of the award-winning show
Even if it delivered nothing but acrobatics, Leo would be a striking piece of theatre. The show, which won the Best of Edinburgh Award at the Edinburgh Fringe and is now being presented at Theatre Row, exists to make our jaws drop, to make us question our own eyes.
The “tricks” are even more alluring because we see exactly how they’re done. On the right side of the stage, we find Leo (played by German acrobat Tobias Wegner) standing in a colorful room with nothing but a suitcase. Lounging around, he lies on the floor and puts his feet on a bright red wall. Later, he balances on one leg and slowly bends down to touch the floor with one hand, letting his other arm and leg jut into the air. By the time the show’s over, he’s contorted himself into all sorts of exotic shapes.
January 19, 2012 No Comments
The Dancer Becomes the Choreographer
How Kate Skarpetowska created striking dances of her own
Buoyant, vivid movement; sensual partnering; and relatable themes have made Parsons Dance a New York staple since 1985. With his stable of sexy, muscular dancers, founder David Parsons has crafted 50 trademark works, often including of-the-moment elements like contemporary rock music. Through January 22nd at the Joyce Theater, audiences can catch both Parsons’ work (including the premiere of his Round My World), as well as the choreography of a former company member, Kate Skarpetowska. “To be able to produce young artists is a complete joy,” Parsons says. “For me, it’s a part of dance.”
In the haunting and aptly titled A Stray’s Lullably (pictured above), Skarpetowska explores the world of the underdog. As car horns and street noise drift in and out, four dancers torque and twist in rounded phrases, hands reaching out and eyes focused down. They move in unison and then writhe separately, melting into hunched positions in slow motion as if floating in sea water. The two solos and duet tell the stories of four downtrodden pedestrians, each with yearning gestures and space-gobbling phrases.
January 17, 2012 No Comments
Dancers As Action Heroes
Inside Elizabeth Streb’s “extreme action” performance
When audiences enter the Park Avenue Armory for STREB: Kiss The Air, they will see a stadium of hardware and obstacles, complete with a pool, zip lines, a rotating 20-foot ladder, and a scaffold tower with three diving platforms. This is the STREB Extreme Action Company’s playground, where dancers fall, crawl, climb, and fly.
December 12, 2011 No Comments
“Once” Again
Director John Tiffany brings the hit indie film to the stage
The 2007 film Once charmingly blurs the line between reality and fiction. The stars, Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova, are indie musicians who dated in real life, so they’re natural on screen as struggling musicians who fall in love.
But how does Once work without them? That’s the question facing John Tiffany, who’s directing a stage musical adaptation at New York Theatre Workshop. Best known for innovative productions like Black Watch, he’s focusing not only on the story, but also on the story’s theatrical shape.
November 28, 2011 No Comments








