Theatre in Review

Saturday, 15 October 2022 15:19

The Joffrey Ballet's 'Beyond Borders' at the Lyric Opera House Resplendent… Transcendent… Provocative Featured

"Suite Saint-Saëns" with Edson Barbosa, Jeraldine Mendoza and Anais Bueno in Joffrey's 'Beyond Borders'. "Suite Saint-Saëns" with Edson Barbosa, Jeraldine Mendoza and Anais Bueno in Joffrey's 'Beyond Borders'. Photo by Cheryl Mann

My major reaction to the Joffrey Ballet’s Fall season opening is deep gratitude: I feel privileged to have seen BEYOND BORDERS. I need to offer a caveat: I love ballet, but I know very little about it. Please, look to the experts for a technical critique. I offer only what I saw and how I feel about it.

BEYOND BORDERS includes three works, beginning with a revival of Liam Scarlett’s “Vespertine”, with Joffrey Cofounder Gerald Arpino’s 1978 classic, “Suite Saint-Saëns” in conclusion.  Both are exquisite in their own ways, but both are also, to my mind, upstaged by the world premiere performance of “colōrem”, from the brilliant up-and-coming choreographer Chanel DaSilva, whose 2020 ballet, “B O R D E R S”, also premiered with the Joffrey.

“colōrem” goes BEYOND BORDERS in so many ways, not the least of which is being the first mainstage work created for the company by a Black woman. As its title suggests, “colōrem” is all about color, like so many of the extraordinary topical works appearing in the 2022-23 Season. It features two sets of dancers wearing unitards (turtlenecked and including gloves and shoes) of glaringly divergent scarlet and charcoal gray, effectively blotting out both their genders and their very humanness.

The Reds and the Grays are separate and subtly discordant, reminiscent of the Sharks and the Jets … or of two rival tribes. This tribal aspect is augmented by the angled, decisive movements and by the precise, driving music by Cristina Spinei. The company’s accuracy and consonance is such that at times I couldn’t tell how many dancers were onstage until one of them moved, repeatedly forming landscapes that would be equally stunning captured in still photography.

Nicole Pearce’s lighting design is used dramatically: curtains, dividers, are created with different colored lights. One of my favorite moments is when a sliver of red light appears along the floor at the back of the stage, and Red dancers wriggle out of the red light onto the stage.

Equally compelling is Liam Scarlett’s “Vespertine”. The piece is unabashedly sensual, enhanced by shadowy stage lighting and Renaissance music – including harpsichord and baroque theorbo, if you please. Michael Hulls’ lighting dimly illuminates the ethereal atmosphere with puffball clusters of bulbs suspended from the ceiling and radiating amber moon-tones.

I already mentioned the impact of the stark leotards in “colōrem”; the costumes in “Vespertine” are also intensely powerful. In accordance with Scarlett’s vision, the dancers wear burgundy and plum: knickers with long-tailed waistcoats, and corsets under extravagant floor-length skirts. The skirts are integrated into the choreography, accenting the sensual movements with swirls and flares of lustrous silk.  Halfway through the dance these sumptuous clothes are stripped away to flesh-toned leotards – as if we are being pared down to our essential selves. 

The final, showcase piece, “Suite Saint-Saëns,” honors co-founder Gerald Arpino’s Centennial Celebration. Camille Saint-Saëns’ music divides the piece into four movements: Caprice Valse, Serenade, Minuet, and Pas Redouble. Clearly earlier than BEYOND BORDERS’ other works, yet Rehearsal Director Suzanne Lopez ensures “Suite Saint-Saëns” remains fresh and original, as the Joffrey ever strives to be. The ballet demands superlative ensemble dancing, while individually highlighting nearly every dancer’s individual mastery – a daunting challenge that Joffrey abundantly meets. Choreographer Agnes DeMille describes the ballet as ‘like standing in a flight of meteors’ – rapid and energetic, demonstrating Arpino’s signature fusion of athleticism, musicality and beauty.   

In all the productions I’ve attended in 2022, the two silent years appear to have rekindled the artists’ creative drive, and they are lavishing upon us three seasons’ worth of talent in a triumphant revival. In BEYOND BORDERS the company is, as ever, gifted, but in this performance they go beyond … well, BEYOND BORDERS, each dancer giving their all to create a unified composition. 

Each piece features principal dancers: two pas de deux by Victoria Jaiani, Alberto Velazquez, Amanda Assucena, and Edson Barbosa in “Vespertine”; Xavier Núñez and Amanda Assucena throughout “colōrem”; and a pas de trois for Anais Bueno, Jeraldine Mendoza and Edson Barbosa in “Suite Saint-Saëns” – to mention only a few. Principals, however, are icing on the Company cake in BEYOND BORDERS; find a full cast list on the Joffrey’s website. As I said, I’m no expert, but I find nothing whatsoever to criticize in the artists’ work, dancers and musicians.

My companion, an experienced stage lighting designer, observed that in “Vespertine,” the puffball globes of lights reflect the varied spotlights. In a certain configuration the wires suspending the foremost centre globe are plainly revealed. As a lighting expert they found this quite distracting. Me, I didn’t notice, but their comment deserves recognition.

Some may find the tickets a bit pricey, but hey! – it’s the Joffrey at Opera Hall!  I personally guarantee that anyone attending BEYOND BORDERS will consider their money very well spent.

Playing at the Civic Opera House through October 23.

It deserves saying again:  Resplendent  … Transcendent … Provocative

VERY Highly Recommended!

 

 

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