Ballet knows no limits
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Deirdre Newman
William Forsythe has been elasticizing the boundaries of ballet for
20 years through his avant-garde choreography for Ballett Frankfurt
-- expanding the limits of classical ballet while integrating
traditional technique.
Forsythe, the director, will bring his ballet troupe to the Orange
County Performing Arts Center next weekend for the beginning of a
bittersweet tour. After this tour, the troupe will disband, although
Forsythe is establishing a new company in Germany.
The center’s organizers invited Ballett Frankfurt to perform with
the hopes of introducing ballet aficionados to an icon and his
innovative choreography, said Judith Morr, the center’s executive
vice president.
“[Ballett Frankfurt] and William Forsythe are acknowledged greats
in the world of dance,” Morr said. “Most of the large companies in
the world have Billy Forsythe’s works, and he really is a legend in
his own time.”
The performances in Segerstrom Hall will feature four of
Forsythe’s most notable works: “Duo,” “(N.N.N.N.),” “One Flat Thing,
Reproduced” and “The Room As It Was.”
The ballets are bold, provocative and not based on traditional
stories like “Swan Lake,” but on intangible concepts like memory and
time.
“There is usually no predetermined emotional initiative, like that
of a story, but our work has very much to do with an active state of
doing,” dancer Natalie Thomas said. “Each ‘scene’ has its own set of
rules and dynamics that inherently puts us in a certain mind space.”
For example, Thomas describes “The Room as it Was” as “a memory,
an improvisation inspired by the past.”
This was achieved by choreographing precise steps, but after this
was done, “it became more stimulating to perform it in a reflection
of its form rather than in its definitive form,” Thomas said. “Now,
we, the performers, have a constant physical dialogue that discusses
what it was and what it is now. The shared point is this concept of
relationship, to each other and to the past.”
Because the ballets don’t follow a typical story line, they
provide the dancers with more freedom, said dancer Demond Hart, who
is in “One Flat Thing, Reproduced.” This particular ballet is also
very physically demanding, Hart said.
“It’s almost aerobic,” Hart said. “At the same time, it’s such a
rush. It’s a very exciting piece. No one will be sleeping during this
one.”
Forsythe’s ability to think algorithmically and create
improvisational steps also gives dancers a sense of individuality,
Thomas said.
“The tools of these improvisations can range drastically,” she
said. “In addition to the physical ideas, the modalities can stem
from something psychological, behavioral or situational. And although
the prescription is specific, the goal is not. The structure is there
for your exploration.”
Ballett Frankfurt is different because Forsythe only uses soloists
-- no corps de ballet. The environment is also distinctive -- the
music sets the stage instead of the scenery. Forsythe employs the
acoustic talent of Dutch composer Thom Willems, who creates an
acoustic arena for the dancers to work within. The music reflects the
emotional dynamic and physicality of the ballets.
After Ballett Frankfurt disbands at the end of the tour, Forsythe
will focus on his new company, working with the states of Saxony and
Hesse, as well as the cities of Dresden and Frankfurt, which will
allow him to stage ballets in both western and eastern Germany.
The center’s website warns that the ballets contain “mature
content,” which is to let parents know that young children probably
won’t understand the sophisticated concepts depicted in the ballets,
Morr said. But that shouldn’t discourage others from coming to
experience the controversial, yet stimulating European perspective of
ballet, Morr added.
“I want people to come because it’s exciting and fresh and
different,” Morr said. “And this, for us, was a year of venturing out
of the traditional story ballets into what’s going on in the dance
world.”
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