Festival Fun – The Dance Salad Part II

Thursday, April 17th was the first night of performances. It was a wonderful night full of energy and expectations.

The curtains opened to Elephant in a Black Box from Spain danced Nacho Duato’s Remanso. The dancers included Isaac Monllor, Lucio Vidal, and Jean-Phillipe Dury. Jean-Phillipe founded the company in 2013. I have to say that I really love the name Elephant in a Black Box; I don’t know if there is anything behind the name but it’s great! I’ve seen Remanso before and I thought it was cute but not much more. The EBB dancers added an element of energy and edge that made the choreography stand out in a completely new way. They actually managed to take the choreography from cute and move it to whimsical and interesting. Much love to EBB.

The lights come up just enough to give the audience a chance to look at their programs. This is really helpful because with such an expansive line up, it’s just impossible to keep a mental scorecard of what’s next. So we can see that dancers Ida Praetorius (loving her name!) and Andreas Kaas of the Royal Danish Ballet are dancing next. I’m really excited to see that it’s an August Bournonville piece because I just have not seen enough Bournonville in person and I’m always thrilled to get to see the real classical Danish Bournonville school in action. The work is a pdd of Kermessen i Brugge and it is just the most adorable bit of classical ballet you have ever seen. The jumps are gorgeous, the feet crisp – Andreas has arches that make you drool and then die – and the pdd is actually a whole little romantic vignette captured in one little pas de deux. This is the only piece of classical ballet in the whole program and I’m a grateful for it. Not that I don’t love the variety but ballet is my deep and abiding love in dance and I always want to see it represented true and well. Indeed, Royal Danish did just that.

Kermessen i Brugge, Royal Danish Ballet.                             Photo by Costin Radu.

Kermessen i Brugge, Royal Danish Ballet. Photo by Costin Radu.

It’s interesting that when Manuel Legris dances, he is still listed as being from Paris Opera Ballet even though he retired in 2009. He has danced with the company that he now leads, Vienna State Ballet, but I guess being an Etoile of POB, even retired, is how he is identified or how he identifies himself? Manuel and Laetitia Pujol danced the final pdd from John Neumeier’s Sylvia. I know there are mixed feelings about this contemporary version of Sylvia but I really like it. I think it is quite clever and there are bits of choreographic genius in all Neumeier’s work. I do wonder about the pdd as a stand alone piece though because if you haven’t seen the whole thing or don’t know the story, I’m not sure that it makes perfect sense but it is a pdd that Manuel dances often at galas, including his own. And each time I’ve seen it, I am mesmerized by the beauty and heartbreak of a chance at love forever lost. If Manuel Legris threw himself to the floor at my feet, you can be sure, I would not be walking away!

Manuel Legris &  Laetitia Pujol, Paris Opera Ballet Photo by: Ursula Kaufmann

Manuel Legris & Laetitia Pujol, Paris Opera Ballet Photo by Ursula Kaufmann

BeijingDance/LDTX may have the coolest name of any dance company anywhere! LDTX stands for Lei Dong Tian Xia which literally translates to Thunder Rumbles Under Heaven. This is a small but formative company of 12 dancers under the artistic direction of Willy Tsao who is China’s biggest wheel in modern dance. The piece is called Treading on Grass and it is luscious in big movement; the entire stage is alight with dancers, there seem to be more than 12! There is so much going on that it borders almost too much; it sits at that delicious place where your brain is almost overwhelmed with amazement, like a double rainbow or a purple sunset, a whole lot for your eyes and brain to take in but you are happy for it.

A big, big act takes us in to intermission – Contemporary KungFu Dance Company. Kungfu and dancing is so much YES! I just can’t even… the company was created in 2006 by non other than Jackie Chan. It would be a mistake to think that KungFu Dance is all flash and show; it is beautiful martial arts technique danced full-out to cinematically, expansive music. It is a show piece but it’s also culture, wonder, and passion.

Contemporary Dragon KungFu Dance Company. Gateway.

Contemporary Dragon KungFu Dance Company. Gateway. Photo by Li Huimin.

The Wortham Center has a large lobby area upstairs from the orchestra section. There is a small bar that has a limited selection of alcohol, soda, water, and nibbles. It’s a really nice space to talk about the performance with friends, even new ones. The Dance Salad is the kind of event where your neighbors are very friendly and even for a person with limited socializing skills like myself, I met lots of wonderful people who parted the evening with “see you at next year’s salad!”

Act II opens up with Beijing Dance/LDTX again, they are dancing a piece choreographed by Li Hanzhong and Ma Bo. It’s almost impossible to describe this dance such is the depth of sorrow and incredible beauty. The dance is an ode to the agony that is part of human existence. The dancers fight against the pain and suffering of death but of course, the fragility of humanity wins. It’s a gorgeous and heartbreaking performance. I am love with this company and with this choreography.

Beijing Dance/LDTX, Sorrowful Song.

Beijing Dance/LDTX, Sorrowful Song. Photo by Wu Yi-Chun.

When the lights come up, the curtain open to a gathering of doctors coats on hangers that rise up above the dancers of Staatstheater Wiesbaden Ballet. A piece called Loops and Lines choreographed by Stephan Thoss is offered. Sometimes I make notes when I watch performances, mostly a few words or phrases to be reminders when I want to write about it later. My notes for this dance are as follows: crotch, crotch, a lot of crotch. Not my favorite bit and I have to say that sometimes I get tired of too much crotch being thrust at my face. Maybe it’s just me.

Or maybe it’s because Lines and Loops is standing in between me and the second performance of the night by Manuel Legris. This time it is the kissing pdd from Angelin Preljocaj’s Le Parc. I enjoy Le Parc a great deal and I think this pdd is one of the most romantic and sexy pdds I have ever had the pleasure of seeing in person. If you’ve never seen this ballet there is a DVD by POB that I recommend. It isn’t Manuel Legris but you can imagine it’s him, that’s what I do. This is the first time I’ve seen Laetitia Pujol dance this role. I’ve had the pleasure of seeing Aurelie Dupont a few times and always loved it. Amazingly I think I liked Laetitia even more. This pdd is the development of romantic and sexual love – from encounter, resistance, conquest, to consummation. Laetitia gave more, her submission to love was complete, and her rapture consuming. I loved her. It was breathtaking.

Paris Opera Ballet, Le Parc. Photo by Gregory Batardon

Paris Opera Ballet, Le Parc. Photo by Gregory Batardon

The finale for the night and every night to follow was a tango piece choreographed by Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui who doesn’t normally choreograph tango and doesn’t speak Spanish so that must have been an interesting process! This was the only piece that had live music – four incredibly talented musicians. The accumulation of tango dancers were made up of world champion dancers with crazy accomplishments in tango. They were very, very good. Tango isn’t my thing at all. The reality is that it just doesn’t do anything for me emotionally nor intellectually. And 30 plus minutes of tango is a lot if you aren’t crazy about it. But I will say that I was fairly well entertained the first night and I would still recommend this performance to anyone because I think it’s good for dancers and dance fans to see things outside of our regular range of taste.

What a wonderful and fantastic way to start a dance festival! I’ve had a great evening, I love it when a dance performance leaves you both exhausted and filled with happy energy! And there are two more performances to go 🙂

**All photographs belong to The Dance Salad  http://www.dancesalad.org/gallery.html

Festivals and Fabulouness

I was quickly flipping through Dance or Pointe magazine, I don’t even remember which, but suddenly Manuel Legris’ name popped out at me in a small paragraph in the lower right hand corner. Manuel Legris was or is going to be in Houston, Texas. My mind sort of fizzled a bit – wait, what??? Houston??? When??? Did I miss this??? I’m about to assume that I missed something that I really needed in my life and I was on the verge of screaming. One should always read an article before screaming so I read it carefully – there was something called The Dance Salad occurring in Houston, Texas and Manuel Legris was going to be dancing in it and I had NOT missed it. So you know exactly what I did, I opened up a  window on my computer and began looking for tickets and airfare! There really was no other choice.

So what I discovered is that there is an annual festival in Houston and it’s called The Dance Salad because it is by design a mixture of various kinds of dance, a salade composée of a generous variety of dancers and dance styles. I get it but it’s still a weird name. And, no offence to Texas because I really like Texas as a general rule, but what in the heck could interest someone of the caliber of Manuel Legris to Houston I wondered? Well, first off, the rest of the line up is pretty darn impressive and looking at past programs it becomes clear that this is no backwoods hoedown! Past Salads have included Semperoper Ballett, Stuttgart Ballet, Estonian National, Royal of Flanders, English National, Vladimir Malakov, and many, many others!

I like galas and festivals. I realize that there is a whole not-cool stigma attached to galas but I don’t really have the time and energy to be snobby, I’ve got stuff to get really excited about!  I don’t really think I missed much by not sitting at the cool kids table all this time and I’m not about to start to worry about it now. For me, the gala or festival is like a tapas bar – a smattering of little plates with wonderful yummy bites of things you’ve never seen before and you get to taste a bunch of different things and walk away satisfied. I enjoy knowing that at a gala or festival, I will almost always see a dancer or company that I was unaware of prior and works by choreographers that I’d never heard of before. Perhaps it is a bit “introduction to dance” but if you aren’t an expert in every form of dance and everything that’s out there then maybe it’s a good place to be. And I am not an expert. At any rate, I find the whole gala/festival bit a lot of fun and I enjoy them without reservation and without apology.

So, yeah, I bought tickets and booked a trip to Houston. The programming is done in such a way that if you attend any two of the three performances, you’ll see everything. I think that’s very cool. I bought tickets for all three nights though as Manuel was dancing every performance. The performances were held in downtown Houston, which is very similar to other large metropolises with a beautiful performing arts complex called The Wortham Center. The festival was held in a nice sized theater called the Cullen. I did think the stage was a tad small but the rake was good and the place filled up to the brim! I’m not sure if Houston is altogether a dance town or not because I met lots of people like myself who came from out-of-town or even out-of-state to attend but I will tell you that this group was  full of hooting and hollering energy.

If you will allow me, I’m going to indulge myself a bit and make a short series about the festival because I think that The Dance Salad is a somewhat hidden gem. There is so much to share, I don’t want to cheat you on information but I also don’t want to throw the entire kitchen as well as the sink into one post either. I’ve already decided to make it an annual event to attend. Who knows, maybe next year you can join me in Houston or find some sort of hidden fabulousness where ever you are!

Here are some particulars:

Looking back at prior programs, The Dance Salad seems to always be held in April of each year. It is held at The Wortham Center in downtown Houston. The official hotel is the Double Tree by Hilton Houston Downtown. It’s where all the dancers stay. I stayed here as well – lots of dancer and choreographer sightings, which is always fun. It’s a nice hotel with a free shuttle to the Wortham. Downtown is just that – there are the theaters, an aquarium, a couple of shopping malls, and The Bayou Place, which is where all restaurants and clubs and whatnot are located. You can get to the Museum District, which is where I went, and to other sites by bus or metro rail. The metro rail isn’t much to speak of, it is only one line, but it is inexpensive and easy to navigate. Hobby airport is closer to downtown but I flew into George Bush International, it was about a 45 minute taxi (expensive) or a much longer multiple stop trip by shuttle (much cheaper). Tickets for the festival run between $20 and $50 per ticket, which is really very reasonable. If you buy multiple tickets, you can get a discount. The festival runs for three performances, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights. On the prior Wednesday there always seems to be a live interview or a film showing or something.  Each performance runs for about three hours. A single program gives a lot of great information about the dancers and the choreographers and it’s free but it’s not very fancy.

Manuel Legris & Laetitia Pujol, Paris Opera Ballet Photo performing at The Dance Salad by: Ursula Kaufmann

Manuel Legris & Laetitia Pujol, Paris Opera Ballet performing at The Dance Salad Photo by: Ursula Kaufmann

 

So sit back in your center orchestra seat, the lights are going down, the curtain is coming up, it’s time to see and hear and feel some dance in Houston, Texas, USA!!!