2008 DANCE SALAD FESTIVAL
PROMISES
QUALITY INTERNATIONAL DANCE
HOUSTON, TX (December
13, 2007) -- The next Dance Salad Festival performances
are scheduled for March 20, 21 & 22, 2008,
at 7:30 PM, Wortham Center, Cullen Theater. Now celebrating
the 13th anniversary season in Houston and 16th season since
its inception in Brussels, Belgium, Dance Salad Festival promises
another gathering of world-class performers. Famous in their
own countries, the dance companies have won praise from critics
and audiences wherever they have toured. For the latest information
on the upcoming season and photos of the dancers coming, visit
www.dancesalad.org.
Dancers from the following companies have
been confirmed for the 2008 Festival:
Národní divadlo,
The National Theatre Ballet, Prague (Czech
Republic) is making its North American debut to perform
three choreographic works, two of them US premiers. Among
the Mountains, by Artistic Director/Choroegrapher Petr
Zuska, is a passionate and dramatic performance set to Czech
and Moravian folk songs arranged by the popular Czech band,
Cechomor. Stamping Ground, Jirí Kylián's
historic, groundbreaking work, is inspired by his experience
with aboriginal dance in Australia, which he used as a model
to create his new vocabulary, and is accompanied by music from
Carlos Chávez. Maria’s Dream, another
work by Zuska, is a witty and poetic ballet inspired by a bizarre
dream of Marie Taglioni, one of the most famous figures of
dance history. This work is set to music by Camille Saint-Saëns
and Cesare Pugni.
Founded in 1883, this company is the flagship of
the Czech Ballet institutions. Between WWI and WWII, the company
gained notoriety by collaborating with modern choreographers
and set designers whose influences shaped the direction of the
company. In the 1990s, the company began incorporating productions
from George Balanchine, Alvin Ailey and Jirí Kylián,
making The National Theatre Ballet Prague one of the premier
European companies on the world stage. Artistic Director Petr
Zuska joined the company in the 2002-2003 Season. He has elevated
the company further while continuing to incorporate works by
noted international choreographers. Zuska’s vision for
the 65-member company is to excel at both classical and contemporary
genres.
BIRTH-DAY:
Jirí Kylián (The Netherlands) – A
Premiere for the USA, the choreographic masterpiece, BIRTH-DAY,
was created by legendary choreographer Jirí Kylián.
Originally performed by Nederlands Dans Theater III, a new
company called Paradox On will perform BIRTH-DAY with the original
cast NDT III dancers. Described as a mix of dance/drama and
film, this choreography was a co-production of Hebbel Theater,
Berlin, (where it premiered in 2001); Saitama Arts Theater,
Japan; and the Nederlands Dans Theater. As the title suggests,
the piece evokes the cycle of time in which nature is born,
dies and is born again. Kylián has said that, "Since
I was very young I have felt deeply that our birth certificate
is actually our death sentence... Between the first day and
the last, much time and energy, filled with creation, desire,
love and confusion, is spent…and during much of this
time, we make fools of ourselves.” Kylián sees
Mozart, whose music he has chosen for this work, "as someone
whose time... was painfully limited, but who nevertheless understood
life in all its richness, fantasy, clownery and madness".
Dance Salad Festival is honored to present together Jirí Kylián's
BIRTH-DAY and his new film CAR MEN, (described below), for
the first time in the USA. Connecting these pieces, you can
better understand Kylián's ideas about the cycle of
Birth and Death through these two wonderful works.
CAR MEN:
NPS Dans, Jirí Kylián (The Netherlands) - Choreographer
Jirí Kylián’s new film, directed by Boris
Pavel Conen. CAR MEN is a black and white film based on the
four archetypes featured in Bizet’s opera, Carmen.
Maggie Foyer, in a Dance Europe review, (October, 2007), says
that, "Kylián's CAR MEN is destined to
become a later-day cult silent movie." Shot in a Czech
coal mine and set on four dancers (Kylián calls these
dancers between the age of 40 years and death...!), the work
was created mainly on-site and exclusively for the film. The
key prop is a car of the 1930s, a sculptural fantasy reminiscent
of the futurist Czech car, the Tatra. The film is a metaphor
for time, speed, stillness, movement, youth and age, while
the story of Carmen is a timeless epic. The four dancers
play the four archetypes featured in the Carmen. They
are Carmen, the restless seductress; Don José, the infatuated
lover; Escamillo, the philanderer; and Michaela, the good-hearted
Samaritan. These characters, dressed as children, relive their
past and tell their story in a surreal, tragicomic manner.
Dutch composer, Han Otten, arranged Bizet’s music and
added extra music specifically composed for the film. The broadcasting
company NPS has presented this new dance production with co-producers
ARTE and Ceská Televize, and with the assistance of
the Dutch Cultural Broadcasting Promotion Fund and the National
Broadcasters Coproduction Fund (CoBO Fund).
The National
Ballet of Canada (Toronto, Canada) – Christopher
Wheeldon’s, Polyphonia, will be a Houston premiere
for this highly acclaimed British choreographer. The work is
described by Michael Crabb, National Post, as, “Spare
and essentially abstract…[Polyphonia] is very
much about the dancers, physically and emotionally. It constantly
tests the body’s pliability and strength, but in doing
so, it also underscores the dancers’ humanity.” Set
to piano music by Gyorgy Ligeti, the ballet demands intense
precision and enormous physical strength and technique from
its four couples. Houston is lucky to see this exquisite company’s
initial presentation in the United States in 2008.
Founded in 1951, The National Ballet of Canada,
with more than 60 dancers, is Canada’s premier dance company
and ranks as one of the world’s top international ballet
companies. It is still the only Canadian company to present a
full range of traditional full-evening ballet classics. The company
also stages contemporary works and encourages the creation of
new ballets and the development of Canadian choreographers, under
the artistic direction of Karen Kain. The company gained a reputation
in 1972, when Rudolf Nureyev set his spectacular production of
The Sleeping Beauty on the company, which was then performed
in Manhattan’s Metropolitan Opera House the following year.
Beijing
LDTX Modern Dance Company (China) – This renowned
Chinese modern dance company is performing The Cold Dagger,
choreographed by Li Han-zhong and wife, Ma Bo, set to music
by American cellist David Darling. Having toured this work
in the US during Fall 2007, this Houston premiere concerns
the fear of being besieged. Set on a chessboard, serenity on
the surface is disturbed by unexpected upheavals. A friend
can be an enemy, tenderness can hurt and love can be hatred.
Wendy Perron, editor of Dance Magazine said, "It was marvelous",
after watching their performance in Monterrey, Mexico. In her
own Dance Magazine blog, Oct 31, 2007, she said of this piece, "stillness
can be as exciting as movement...a noble quality, a readiness."
The birth of Beijing LDTX Modern Dance Company
in September 2005 carries with it the full history of the former
Beijing Modern Dance Company, including Willy Tsao’s executive
artistic directorship and Li Han-zhong’s important, internationally
known choreography. Beijing LDTX enjoys national and international
acclaim as one of the foremost companies of modern dance in China
with choreographic work that clearly reflects the rapid cultural
changes modern China is undergoing. Under Artistic Director Willy
Tsao from Hong Kong and Beijing’s Li Han-zhong, Deputy
Artistic Director and House Choreographer, Beijing LDTX Company
is the first independent, non-government subsidized, dance company
in China and boasts an ensemble of 14 technically exquisite dancers
and a diverse contemporary Chinese repertoire.
Hamburg
Ballet (Germany) – Hamburg Ballet dancer/choreographer,
Yaroslav Ivaneko, has received many choreographic awards and
has danced with Hamburg Ballet since 1999. He is showing his
piece, Ne m'oublie pas with music by Yann Tiersen.
Yaroslav was invited by John Neumeier, well known director
of the Hamburg Ballet, to present and perform this piece with
his partner for the Nijinsky-Gala XXXII, Hamburg Ballet's famous
Gala in July. The piece is a searing, lyrical pas de deux with
Russian born, from Kiev, Yaroslav dancing with French born,
Hamburg Ballet Principal dancer, Helene Bouchet. She was recently
invited to be a dancer with Christopher Wheeldon's new company's
opening in Vail, Colorado. John Neumeier has been instrumental
in this dancer/choreographer’s development. Neumeier
has been Hamburg Ballet's director since 1973. In this time,
the company has multiplied its performances acquired abroad
and varied its repertory of classics and contemporary works.
Today the Hamburg Ballet possesses a character all its own,
thanks to Neumeier's own choreography and dramatically oriented
aesthetic sense which has greatly influenced Yaroslav.
Staatsballett
Berlin (Berlin, Germany) – The Staatsballett
Berlin begins a new era as the ballet companies of the city’s
three opera houses have combined into a single institution.
Artistic Director Vladimir Malakhov’s vision for the
future is to create a distinctive company by infusing the classical
repertoire with complimentary neoclassical works. Staatsballett
dancers Soraya Bruno and Martin Buczkó make their US
debut at Dance Salad Festival. Bruno and Buczkó will
be performing an excerpt of Benvindo Fonseca’s La
Casa de Bernarda Alba. The Houston premiere features a
mixture of a completely modern piece danced by two classically
trained dancers. The Latin flare of this Portuguese choreographer,
Argentinean ballerina, and Hungarian male dancer add to the
magic and charisma of the creation. La Casa de Bernarda
Alba is based on Federico García Lorca’s
play of the same name. An authoritative mother decides that
her 5 daughters will live as recluses in their own home, protecting
them from sin. As time passes in a house inhabited only by
women, the daughters mature into characters filled with hate,
submission, and rebellion. The only male figure is a symbol
of escape, as a dream. He flirts with the 5 daughters until
falling in love with Martirio. The pas de deux presented is
the dance between Martirio and this man. It is a strong piece
conveying deep emotional feelings of two people in love who
know they will never be allowed to be together.
Marcin
Krajewski is a principal dancer performing with the
Ballet of the Teatr Wielki -Polish National Opera (Warsaw,
Poland). Marcin will perform Les Bourgeois,
a solo piece choreographed by Ben Van Cauwenbergh. Set to music
by Jacques Brel, the piece reveals Marcin Krajewski’s
exquisite talent as a dancer and his natural ability as an
actor. Housed in the historic 1833 Opera House, Teatr Wielki,
the Warsaw Ballet Company has been Poland’s leading ballet
company for the past 160 years. The company has worked under
many master choreographers.
Makoto
Matsushima (Tokyo, Japan) is dancing in his own choreography, Invisible
City. This piece expresses the concept of urban living
by juxtaposing ideas like silence and noise, small spaces within
a larger city and converting noise into song. Matsushima’s
work balances playfully between visual art, object design,
dance, music, voice art and theater. He has developed an original
movement, voice art, which is strongly influenced by Aikido,
Iai, Kendo, Tai-chi and other Asian martial and chanting arts.
Matsushima's work is rich in expressions of human life in urban
surroundings, such as mixture of nature and art. His works
are described as, “a spatial poem” and “a
humoristic lyrical changing environment of urban Asia.” Since
1983, Makoto Matsushima has been the core member of internationally
acclaimed Japanese dance theatre company PAPPA TARAHUMARA,
which recently performed at BAM in New York City. In addition
to touring with the company worldwide on a regular basis, he
has been creating solo pieces and collaborating on choreography
in Europe and China.
Jacoby&Pronk
(New York/Amsterdam) – Drew Jacoby, formally
of Alonzo King's Lines Ballet and named “It Girl” by
Dance Magazine in May 2006, and Rubi Pronk, formally of the
Dutch National Ballet, have formed a special dance partnership.
Brought together by artistic virtuosity and athleticism, they
have invited young, contemporary, classically trained choreographers
to create new work inspired by their unique talent. Their mission
is to compile a distinctive repertoire that enables dance presenters
to offer their audiences something fresh, exhilarating, and
awe-inspiring. Dance Salad Festival will present a new work
created for them by Belgian born Annabelle Lopez Ochoa called One.
A dynamic, abstract work focusing on the long limbs and lines
of Jacoby&Pronk, this will be Annabelle’s third piece
of choreography presented in DSF.
As illustrated in the myth about love by the Greek
poet Aristofanes, the human being was once a man and a woman
attached to each other by their backs. These creatures with four
legs, four arms and two faces were so strong, that Zeus decided
to separate them. From that moment the constant longing
to be reunited with one’s missing half appeared. “When
Drew Jacoby and Rubi Pronk asked me to create a work for them,
I was struck by their united force when they dance together… they
become this fierce-full hybrid that I call ONE. ” remarks
Lopez Ochoa.
~
Dance Salad Festival is a curated, international
production with performances by companies from around the world,
chosen solely for their excellence - an event that can be seen
only in Houston, Texas. During the week of Dance Salad Festival,
the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and Houston International Dance
Coalition/Dance Salad Festival will host a Choreographers’ Forum where
the audience will have the opportunity to see dance film and
hear from some of the invited Festival choreographers. Jirí Kylián's
new film, CAR MEN, will be premiered this evening. The program
is scheduled for Wednesday, March 19, 2008, 6:30 PM at
the museum’s Brown Auditorium. Also during that week, master
classes will be held in various locations throughout the city
so that students and professionals can learn from these invited
master choreographers.
Classical, modern and contemporary dance share
the Dance Salad Festival stage to form a mix of movement and
compelling choreographic invention. Members of some of the world’s
best dance companies come to Houston to participate in the week
long Festival. Each night’s production is uniquely curated
and designed as a coherent, expressive performance; to see the
full range of the choreography presented requires attending two
of the three evenings. Starting in February 2008, detailed information
about each individual night’s performances will be available
on the web site www.dancesalad.org.
This multicultural presentation has received international
recognition for its quality and innovativeness and has consistently
been a source of cultural pride for many foreign communities
that are represented in Dance Salad Festival. Houston’s
83 member Consular Corps is a community partner and many country
members serve as sponsors and hosts. Director Nancy Henderek
strongly believes that through the arts we can build bridges
between different countries and cultures.
Dance Salad Festival has been praised by local,
national and international publications. Dance Magazine said: "Producer
Nancy Henderek’s eye for some of the best international
dance is unparalleled…(Dance Salad Festival) could wind
up as the premier contemporary dance festival between the East
and West coasts." In a recent special section of The
Houston Chronicle entitled "Houston’s Ultimate
People," Nancy Henderek is described as a "one-woman
United Nations."
For up-to-date information and photo gallery
visit www.dancesalad.org
Media Contact:
info@dancesalad.org
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