Above: Francesca Todesco in Isadora Duncan's REVOLUTIONARY; photo by Julie Lemberger
~ Author: Oberon
Sunday November 4th, 2018 matinee - Francesca Todesco, a dancer whose performances in works by Isadora Duncan and Anna Sokolow have moved me in recent seasons, celebrated her twenty-year journey in New York City today with a program of danceworks in which she shared the stage with longtime colleagues in pieces choreographed by Isadora Duncan, Anna Sokolow, Catherine Gallant, Rae Ballard, and Jim May.
The performance took place in Speyer Hall, at University Settlement on Eldridge Street: kind of a long trek for me, but eminently worthwhile in the long run. In a finely-paced production, gorgeously lit and featuring live music from the excellent young pianist Nathaniel LaNasa, the value of seeing dance in an up-close-and-personal setting was again affirmed.
Dancers Rae Ballard, Eleanor Bunker, Ilana Cohen, Daniel Fetecua-Soto, Catherine Gallant, Samantha Geracht, Erika Langmeyer, Lauren Naslund, Loretta Thomas, and Margherita Tisato all participated in Francesca's fête today. The legendary Jim May appeared as The Poet in Anna Sokolow's IDEAS OF AN ACROBAT (from MAGRITTE, MAGRITTE).
Solo works by Anna Sokolow and Isadora Duncan opened the performance, with Francesca Todesco dancing the choreography of the two iconic female dancemakers with whom the dancer is closely associated. For Ms. Sokolow's POEM (1995), composer Bruno Belthoise wrote a new piano score (Poème) which is pensive to begin with, then begins to ripple. The dancer is quite still, her hands and arms slowly becoming animated. As the music rises in passion, she enfolds an empty embrace and then backs away.
Above: Improvisation to Brahms, photo from MeemsImages
While Ms. Todesco changed costumes, Mr. LaNasa played one of Johannes Brahms' piano solos from Opus 118 whilst all the women dancers filled the space in what seemed like an improvisational dance with sylphlike lightness and gestural language in the Duncan vein. As this interlude progressed, individual dancers would sometimes pause - close enough for me to reach out and touch - making me feel almost a part of the dance.
Above: Francesca Todesco in Isadora Duncan's HARP; photo by Julie Lemberger
The Isadora Duncan solo HARP (c. 1917) refers to the mythic Aeolian Harp and is danced to a Chopin étude. Now gowned in flowing white, with long draping sleeves, Ms. Todesco moves radiantly to the rippling piano music to and ecstatic ending. Simply gorgeous!
Above: Loretta Thomas and the ensemble rehearsing Isadora Duncan's POLONAISE MILITAIRE
Loretta Thomas led a quartet of women in Isadora Duncan's marvelous POLONAISE MILITAIRE (c. 1914), also set to Chopin. Eleanor Bunker, Ilana Cohen, Erika Langmeyer, and Margherita Tisato - all wearing classic Isadora tunic-style frocks - were excellent, and Ms. Thomas danced with distinctive authority. This work is an affirmation of feminine power and sisterhood.
Music of Chopin brought Ms. Todesco forth in two Isadora Duncan solos, NARCISSUS (1904) and MINUTE WALTZ (1905). In the first of these, Ms. Todesco - in a rose-shade over-tunic - moves expressively to the sad, familiar melody. As the tempo accelerates, she executes soft turns in place before taking a series of poses on the floor and finally collapsing.
In MINUTE WALTZ, Ms. Todesco is bathed in warm light; she begins to sway gently, then fills the space with restless, questing movement.
Above: Catherine Gallant, Eleanor Bunker, and Margherita Tisato in Catherine Gallant's WAVE; photo from MeemsImages
Catherine Gallant's WAVE (2001) continued in a Chopin mode (his Mazurka #43); from a statuary pose, three women - Ms. Gallant, Eleanor Bunker, and Margherita Tisato - dance a sisterly trio in an homage to Isadora. At its end, they resume their original pose. To all these Chopin works, Mr. LaNasa's playing brought freshness and verve.
For the piano four-hands pieces by Florent Schmitt used by Isadora Duncan for her 1914 work, REFLETS D'ALLEMAGNE, Isidora Vladic shared the keyboard with Mr. LaNasa. In the first of two excerpts, Lübeck, Eleanor Bunker, Catherine Gallant, and Loretta Thomas display the trademark movement motifs and gestures that define the Isadora style: their dancing has a natural grace and musical affinity. They are joined for Nuremburg by Ms. Tisato; fleeting solo passages here are lovingly communicative.
Concluding the program's first half, Ms. Todesco had one of her dreams come true as she danced Jim May's 1985 duet SLEEPING BOUQUET, which she had first seen some 20 years ago and always wanted to dance. The only work today performed to recorded music (the familiarly romantic Adagio from the Rachmaninoff second piano concert), Ms. Todesco was partnered here by Daniel Fecetua-Soto, former Limón principal.
After the interval, there was a piano four-hands prelude to the program's second half: Mr. LaNasa and Ms. Vladic played Brahms' Hungarian Dance #8 in such a lively manner that I half-expected audience members to rise and kick up their heels.
Above: Jim May as the Poet in IDEAS OF AN ACROBAT; photo by Meemsimages
Anna Sokolow's IDEAS OF AN ACROBAT (from MAGRITTE, MAGRITTE) is performed to a specially-composed piano work by Haziel Masiello. Jim May, standing directly before me in a suit and bowler à la Magritte, intones poetry by Paul Eluard with his hauntingly inflected voice as dancers Eleanor Bunker, Samantha Geracht, and Lauren Naslund perform a stylized, ritualistic dance. Spotlit, the women's shadows become part of the movement. The dancers become more animated, yet remain stationary for the most part. This atmospheric work ends in fading light.
Above: Daniel Fetecua-Soto and Francesca Todesco in Rae Ballard's FADOS DOS AMANTES; photo by Julie Lemberger
Two premieres with a Portuguese flavour are next, both choreographed by Rae Ballard - a name new to me. These were commissioned by Ms. Tedesco. In the first, FADOS DOS AMANTES (music by Eduardo Burnay and Alexandre Rey Colaço), a pair of lovers move thru various states of their relationship.
Ms. Todesco dances the first movement while Mr. Fetebua-Soto slumbers on the floor: Francesca wears a long black dress, sometimes giving her skirt a provocative twitch. The male solo is more searching, and more animated. The concluding duet shows the couple bound to each other, for better or worse.
Above: from Rae Ballard's PORTUGUESE SUITE; photo from MeeemsImages. From left: Ms. Ballard, Lauren Naslund, and Samantha Geracht
Rae Ballard's lyrical choreography for herself and Mlles. Geracht and Naslund in EXCERPT FROM PORTUGUESE SUITE is lovely to behold. They dance in silence, and also to music by Luis Costa. This excerpt is part of a work-in-progress to be premiered in 2019.
To conclude the program, Isadora Duncan's SCRIABIN ÉTUDES (1921-1923) were strikingly played by Mr. LaNasa and superbly danced by Ms. Todesco. In the course of the work's three movements, we can savour Francesca's gift for making emotional connections both to the music and to her audience. Clad in red, the dancer's expressive face and sublime use of gesture move from anxious animation thru the quiet despair of bereavement, to the embodiment of a passionate revolutionary: a woman who peers out at us and who utters a series of silent screams.
Bouquets were presented as a lively standing ovation greeted Francesca and all her colleagues at the end of this truly wonderful performance.
~ Oberon