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In
The Zone The Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival Opens Opening
Night Gala Performance by
Lisa Rinehart The late Greg Hines said that whenever he danced he was searching for The Zone. "I want to get completely in touch with what I'm feeling. Once I'm in touch with what I'm feeling, I can dance to it," he says, in a recorded interview with Rose Eichenbaum, part of the Masters of Movement: Portraits of America's Great Choreographers exhibit on display in Blake's Barn. Glover fiercely pursues the same goal, but with a more intense aggression than that of his mentors. (At 13, already an established wunderkind, Glover worked with Hines and other tap greats on the film "Tap.") He works with his band like a sixth musician, challenging them—and us—to find the rhythms in his sounds. Like Glover, we don't know what's coming next, but we're caught up in the loud sweaty ride as he, eyes closed and lips parted in a slight smile, stomps, slides and tipples his way into the sweet spot. Glover was the highlight of the opening night gala which, typical of gala performances was a taste of what's to come for the 2005 festival season. There was a piece d'occasion by Margo Sappington in which the Pillow's summer ballet students leaped their exuberant young way through John Adams' "The Chairman Dances" (excerpted from "Nixon in China"). Put together in four days, this was a valiant attempt to remind the gala audience of how integral student life is to the Pillow. The idea makes sense, but the students were sometimes overwhelmed by Sappington's razzmatazz approach and might have been better served by something simpler. Nonetheless, it was a fine effort and probably a valuable addition to their learning experience. Ben Munisteri Dance Projects was also featured with "Turbine Mines," a 2004 work set to the Vangelis soundtrack of the film "Blade Runner." Munisteri uses space effectively, moving his dancers in quirky formations and lapsing into the vernacular of cha cha steps at pleasingly odd moments, but speaking as a Blade Runner fan, I found the use of dialogue from key moments of the film distracting. The film is so visually arresting that hearing a few lines backed by Vangelis' eery techno music made me want to see the film more than Munisteri's dancers—probably not the effect Munisteri was looking for. He will premier a new work later in the season. Thanks to Glover, however, the evening closed on a promising note, and validated Ella Baff's referral to the Pillow in her opening remarks as "the mothership of dance." Glover and his band will return to the stage next week, this time accompanied by two more highly accomplished tappers, Jimmy Slyde and Diane Walker, and three of Glover's young protegés. It promises to be a lively start to a diverse festival program embracing contemporary ballet, modern, hip-hop, tap, dance theater, African-American dance and even tribal Maori dance as envisioned by the New Zealand group, Black Grace. This wide ranging programming gives the Pillow a metaphorical stab at The Zone by providing a welcoming forum where a variety of dance can be seen by an enthusiastic and supportive audience. The ghosts of Ted Shawn and his Men Dancers are very present in the Pillow's bucolic setting, and it's easy to imagine them graciously serving tea before the performance—as was their custom—anticipating with the rest of us an evening of pure dance under the night sky of the Berkshires. Photo: Savion Glover, by Len Irish. Volume 3,
No. 24
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