Dance in Review

Displaying items by tag: Aaron Choate

Steppenwolf's cozy downstairs theater provided the ideal setting for an evening of outstanding and expressive dance by the highly acclaimed Season 47 Fall Series by Hubbard Street Dance Company.

The performance began with Aszure Barton's “return to patience,” featuring the entire company uniformly dressed in simple, gray and pale blue loose-fitting attire, defying gravity by leaning into space rather than onto each other. The piece masterfully captures a sense of restless animation striving for contemplative serenity, achieving this balance beautifully. (Set to Caroline Shaw’s “Gustave Le Gray,” an adaptation of Chopin’s gentle “Mazurka in A Minor, Op. 17, No. 4”).

The second piece, a solo performance titled “Show Pony” (2018, HSDC premiere 2023), danced by Shota Miyoshi, stands in stark contrast to “return to patience.” Clad in a formfitting, shiny gold Vegas Elvis jumpsuit, Miyoshi's performance is spectacular. He is literally spotlighted with beautiful lighting by Dan Scully that appears and disappears, as he dominates the stage. The term “Show Pony” perfectly encapsulates Miyoshi's confident and explosive dancing.

Lar Lubovitch’s “Prelude to a Kiss (2005, HSDC 2023) is a romantic delight, danced superbly by Alexandria Best and Elliot Hammans with palpable chemistry. The couple's dance and flirtation are mesmerizing, with Best sometimes hanging from Hammans' arms like an exquisite butterfly. Their duet is mesmerizing and romantic, culminating in a breathtaking moment as Hammans gently removes the shoulder straps from Best's gown, one at a time, and plants a single, masterful kiss on the exposed nape of her neck.

In “Sweet Gwen Suite, Cyrie Topete, Dominick Brown, and Aaron Choate dazzle in wildly sexy, bedazzled leather and Mexican-style form-fitting pants and bolero jackets, with costumes designed by Bobby Pearce. This number by Bob Fosse and Gwen Verdon exudes sass, flair, and self-confidence. Brown and Choate support lead dancer Cyrie Topete, who shines in what feels like a near-solo performance. Topete makes every gesture count, from smoking and extinguishing her cigarette with a sexy twist of her leather boot toe, to the defiant lift of her chin and single smile at the end, like a victorious matador. The act was set to Herb Alpert & Tijuana Brass’ “Mexican Shuffle,” Lola Schiffrin’s “Cool Hand Luke,’ and “Mexican Breakfast” by Johnny Mandel.

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in 'BUSK' by Aszure Barton.

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s opening night of the company’s Season 47 Fall Series was graced by the presence of Nicole, the daughter of Bob Fosse and Gwen Verdon. HSDC proudly became the first company to collaborate with the Verdon/Fosse Legacy to showcase Fosse's work. As a longtime admirer of Verdon/Fosse-inspired dance, this collaboration brought their iconic style to life in a thrilling and deeply satisfying way.

In the show’s final act, “Busk by Aszure Barton opens with Elliot Hammans sleeping on the street, transforming into a character reminiscent of Buster Keaton, complete with hat and cane. Hammans' wonderfully expressive face enhances his dance performance, as he is joined by a cast of street people. Their movements range from defiant leaps to huddled masses, pleading for help with outstretched arms, their faces conveying profound sadness, struggle, and desperation. Random vocalizations are also used by the dancers, which really add to the already stunning piece. The entire dance company is involved in what is the perfect finale.

I highly recommend this incredible and passionate selection of dance performances, including the collaboration with the Gwen Verdon Bob Fosse Legacy, for audiences of all ages. The Hubbard Street Dance Chicago dancers are uniquely gifted and each piece so mesmerizing, making it difficult to pick a favorite number. The company’s Season 47 Fall Series, beautifully staged at Steppenwolf’s Downstairs Theatre, was truly a night of dance you and your family and friends will never forget.

For more information on Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s current and upcoming performances, visit https://www.hubbardstreetdance.com/.  

(*Dancers alternate roles in performaces depending on select dates. This review reflects the dancers performing for the specific performance reviewed.) 

Published in Dance in Review

There are no words.

Well, obviously that’s not true cos I’m about to say a whole bunch of words – they can pretty much all be found in the thesaurus under glorious, magnificent, gorgeous … you get the idea. The only bad news is that it’s a short run, just May 17-19, but don’t despair: HUBBARD STREET DANCE is Chicago-based, and they’ll be back. Get on their email list so you can get tickets to their next show. Pricey? maybe. Value for the money? inestimable!

I’m unabashedly biased: I’ve been watching and loving HUBBARD STREET DANCE for almost forty of their forty-six years, but despite that familiarity, OF JOY blew my socks clean off. OF JOY is the third and final series in HUBBARD STREET DANCE’s 2023/24 Season: OF ABUNDANCE. The 47th season will kick off in November, so start watching your inbox in October.

The program included four pieces with two intermissions. The dances made the need for the intermissions clear: the company needed to recuperate, recover, regain, rehydrate, rebound, and rally. OMG the amount of pure energy expended!

First was Echoes of Our Ancestors, choreographed by the world-renowned Maria Torres and danced by the entire company to music by Philip Hamilton. Its narrative choreography connected with the traditional Caribbean Latino rhythms, and Luis Razo’s costumes used the brilliant colors characteristic of Afro-Latino culture, with enormously wide skirts that became wings and striped shawls swept with the rhythms. One dancer described Echoes of Our Ancestors as ‘a melting pot’, and Torres agreed that she intended the work to form a bond between Afro-Latino and other cultures. The dance was a whirling turbulence with dancers all over the stage – I’d like to watch it several more times to catch the action in other realms of the stage.

After intermission the show resumed with a solo, Show Pony, danced on the night I attended (5/18/24) by Cyrie Topete (she/they) [on other nights the dancers were Alysia Johnson (Alysia/she/her) and Aaron Choate (they/them)]. Kyle Abraham choreographed, and Fritz Masten costumed Topete in a full leotard of gleaming gold, which took on other tones under Dan Scully’s lighting. Cyrie says she danced Show Pony with “spontaneous and playful choices … I feel powerful and confident, and I feel safe to roar!” – all of which was wholeheartedly evident in her dancing. The music, Hatshepsut, was written and performed by Jlin and was equally spontaneous and playful. The music and choreography were truly one, not simply complementary but reciprocal, interchangeable.

A Duo was choreographed by Resident Artist Aszure Barton (she/her), working with dancers Abdiel Figueroa Reyes (he/they) and Aaron Choate (they/them). I adore M/M pas de deux, and I believe it was subtly enhanced by both dancers being nonbinary. Another augmentation was the collaborative choreography: Barton continually evolved it in response to each dancer’s strengths and virtuosity, as well as the chemistry between the dancers, which was palpable. Choate says Barton’s work is so difficult that performing it gives a dancer fresh insight into their capacity and potential. Two words used in reference to A Duo were curiosity and playfulness. Yup, two in a row, Show Pony and A Duo, with ‘playful’ intrinsic to the choreography and performance. The music was amazing as well: “Miu” and “Shaolin Mantis” composed, produced, and recorded by Maria Herlop. Performing on electric bass was Oscar Garrobe; Mix James Ginzburg and Marina Herlop. I needed the intermission myself to get my breath back after this!

The final selection was Impasse, choreographed by Swedish Johan Inger, who also did the Scenic Design, with Fernando Hernando Magadan as Stager. This was a complex piece, very energetic, with fourteen dancers:  Alexandria Best (she/her), Jacqueline Burnett (she/her), Michelle Dooley (she/her), Aaron Choate (they/them), Elliot Hammans (he/him), Jack Henderson (he/him), Alysia Johnson (she/her), Shota Miyoshi (he/him), David Schultz (he/him), Matt Wenckowski (he/him), Simone Stevens (she/her), Cyrie Topete (she/they), and Craig D. Black Jr (he/they; also Rehearsal Director).

It was astonishing to witness some of the incredible contortions a human body can tangle itself into! Dancers reported being initially dubious about some of the choreography, not completely sure a human body could do that … but it could, and they did! The erstwhile impossible configurations were achieved, then passed into muscle memory and were embraced. Aggregates of dancers formed patterns and enactments, working together to weave storylines then unravelling into new compositions. The music included Diagnostic by Ibrahim Maalouf, distributed by Harmonia Mundi – Lily (is 2), Will Soon be a Woman, Maeva in the Wonderland, Your Soul, and Never Serious. Original composition by Amos Ben-Tai.

I have only one criticism: the volume of the music. It was excessive for me, even with my rock band-hardened eardrums. My companion has sensory processing issues and was at times in pain, even with their fingers in their ears. The music was gorgeous, all of it, and absolutely perfect with the choreography, but it was almost too loud to hear – kind of like being too tired to sleep y’know? Neither are pleasant.

I wish I could tell you to see HUBBARD STREET DANCE perform OF JOY, but the run is over … was over before I had this review written. But some individual dances will be repeated, and additional ones performed, in the 47th season. And just think: the 2027/28 season will be HUBBARD STREET DANCE’s 50th, so there’s bound to be an extravaganza of dance that year!

VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

Published in Dance in Review

 

 

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