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Karole Armitage, once known as a "punk ballerina," brings her dance troupe to the Berkshires.
by Debra Cash
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Scene from Armitage Gone! Dance's "In this dream that dogs me" |
BOSTON, Mass. - July 26, 2006 -
Where has dancer Karole Armitage gone? Is "gone" a verb or adjective?
Why has she put an exclamation mark smack in the middle of her new company's
name? The articulate choreographer with A-list artist friends, sweethearts and
couturier collaborators seems to wave across the footlights to her American
audiences. You want European swagger? the escapee from Lawrence ,
Kansas seems to ask. You want high-gloss, 21 st century abstract
expressionism ? Here's your ticket ! Personally, I'm outa
here, so let me introduce you to my avatars!
For those who didn't catch her troupe in her "punk ballerina" days,
the early and mid-1980s, Karole
Armitage was a dancer at the Geneva Ballet,
where she danced Balanchine repertory. Then she spent five seasons (1976-1981)
with Merce Cunningham. In their linearity and strict discipline, those contrasting
styles were more similar than you might think.
Speaking on a panel at Cambridge, MA's Green
Street Studios in conjunction with her company's recent performance at
the Concord Academy, Armitage explained
that when she went out on her own -- her first works were notable for their
sadism and extreme technique, not to mention the neon-colored fake fur pants
-- she rebelled against Cunningham's model of dance and musical score "co-inhabiting
the same performance space." She wanted music, she wanted costumes, she
wanted an integrated vision or at least one that wasn't driven by chance. She
wanted, in short, control. Today, as she explains it, her dance making and collaborative
process is "a way to overhear myself thinking and talking about my life."
From
the looks of it, that inner life retains a fondness for cerebral problem-solving
and for interactions based on overt and covert manipulation. Armitage, a biologist's
daughter, describes the opening quartet of her 2005 "In this dream that
dogs me," as being about the dancers partnering each other in ways that resemble
the interlocking forces within a molecule. It looks that way, too.
Theresa Ruth
Howard, a former member of Dance Theatre of Harlem with a build like supermodel/beach
volleyball player Gabrielle Reece, is the center of a knot of activity, her
muscled legs unfolding at the center of the skirmish made by three men of
vastly different sizes and temperaments: quicksilver Leonides D. Arpon, tender
Brian Carey Chung and regal, aloof William Isaac. The lifts take the dancers'
athleticism, and their genders, for granted. As they boost each other under
and over legs, shoulders, and behinds, the shapes seem nested rather than labored.
Annie
Gosfield's inventive score shifts its mood among piano chords, something like
swipes on an electronic zither, snappy snare drums and lavish strings verging
on syrup. Intermittently, a narrative is implied, as when tiny, pony-tailed
Megumi Eda comes on and puts her hands over Arpon's ears as if telling him
what he can and can't hear. Eda is in the midst of a tantrum, but every slap
or foot to his chest activates an idiosyncratic reaction from her partner until
it turns into a game they are aware of playing. Eventually Howard and Eda dance
side by side. Their gestures are barely in synch, as if telling different stories
using the same words. As their energy winds down, they seem to turn over in
sleep and return to unfinished dreams.
Armitage deploys her
dancers with a rare
combination of messy feelings and pristine technique. This doesn't always make
sense, especially when she throws in shapes that evoke social dancing or classical
ballet and so refer to other worlds and other etiquettes. But this combination
may be the key to her otherwise inexplicable decision to title her dances with
evocative lines by cranky (and some would charge racist and misogynist) poet
Philip Larkin.
The title of "In this dream..." comes from the opening of Larkin's
1946 "Tramerei"; Armitage's most recent work, which will be seen in
excerpts at Jacob's Pillow later this month is called "Time is the echo
of an axe within a wood."
The poet and dance-maker could be inhabiting the
same forest. In Larkin's estranged lyrics, and Armitage's dances, human relations
are corralled and made bearable by sheer technique.
Armitage Gone!
Dance performs at Jacob's
Pillow in Becket, Mass. August 3
through 6, 2006 with a free outdoor showing of excerpts from her work
on August 3, 2006 and a public interview with the choreographer on August 5,
2006.

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