Five Fenómenos From The Arts Umbrella Dance Company
Monday, May 18, 2015
Top left, Albert Galindo, Andrew Haydock and Tristan Ghostkeeper, sitting Charlie Prince & Jayson Syrette |
Those who have gotten beyond just looking at the photograph above, might wonder what Jai-alai and bullfighting have to do with male ballet and modern dancers. You can opt out or persist and find out why.
In the late 50s and early 60s while living in Mexico I was
an avid fan of La Pelota, or frontón which in English is Jai-alai. Because my maternal grandfather had
been Basque (my maternal surname is de Irureta Goyena) I thought I had a
connection with this ultimate and very fast Basque sport. The only conditions
imposed on allowing me to enter what was an unusual gambling establishment
(in Frontón you can even bet during the game) was that I wear a coat and tie.
The best of the frontón players were called fenómenos,
sometimes also a term reserved for very good bullfighters. The concept of the
fenómeno is that somehow the person endowed can only answer to an unexplainable
factor of a higher being and in the case of Spaniards (and Basques) that would
make it a God given talent that does not have a rational explanation.
My other enthusiastic love was the bullfight, in Spanish
a corrida de toros or fiesta taurina. Because my maternal grandmother had been
born in Seville I felt that my Spanish heritage (Basques do not consider
themselves to be Spaniards) allowed me to enjoy the art of bullfighting.
Before anybody stops reading right here let me explain.
Bridge, the card game is never placed in the sports page of the NY Times but in
the first editorial pages. Likewise in Mexico, bullfighting articles are always
in the arts section and never in the sports section.
Bullfighting is not a sport. The bull never really has a
chance although it is still dangerous for the bullfighter. Quite a few get
gored and many have died on the field. Bullfighting is a dance sport. The
bullfighter, very much like in ballet has certain steps that are steeped in
ritual and history. Watching a male ballet dancer do the ballet walk is as
lovely as it is to watch a bullfighter confront the bull and either walk
forwards towards the bull or backward with nary a glance.
In short bullfighting is a dangerous version of dance.
More so if it is a man (there have been a few women) on horseback. I have been
lucky to have seen one of the best of all rejoneadores, Don Álvaro Domecq do
his dance on a beautiful and prancing white horse.
I cannot ever watch a good man dance be it ballet or
modern dance or my most favourite Gene Kelly in any American musical without
thinking of being at the Plaza Monumental in Mexico City. It was there that I witnessed the
elegant Paco Camino fight dangerous Miura bulls, lineage to a Seville cattle
ranch run by Eduardo Miura Fernández.
For me the male dancer dealing with a female dancer is in
a situation that is almost as dangerous. Perhaps I may be exaggerating!
Until the advent of the 19th century the male
dancer was king. Ballet, as created by Louis the IV was a male dance art form.
Fortunately for the upstarts, the ballerinas, kings were beheaded and liberal times brought them forward. Suddenly men were
there to lift women and women were the new queens.
Perhaps that changed with the Russian Revolution and the
exile of Russian dancers to the West. Three Russians, Vaslav Nijinksy, Rudolf
Nureyev and Mikhail Baryshnikov were important in that change in the 20th
century. Suddenly men dancers had to do more than lift. Of late in Ballet BC
performances I have seen that even change to women lifting men!
In my limited contact with male dancers I have been fortunate
to have met and photographed, Todd Woffinden, Miroslav Zydowicz, Edmond Kilpatrick, Jones Henry and Donald Sales (all former luminaries of Ballet BC) –
and of course Peter Bingham, John Alleyne, Jay Hirabayashi, Wen Wei Wang, Noam Gagnon, Byron Chief Moon, and AlvinTolentino.
I was lucky to meet and photograph, back stage, Rex Harrington dancing with Evelyn Hart. The interaction between them was electric,
At present I have watched all the new men of Ballet BC
including four Arts Umbrella graduates, Connor Gnam, Alexander Burton,
Christoph von Riedemann and Scott Fowler. And I must not forget the spectacular
Ballet BC Darren Devaney, and Peter Smida.
In my early days (in the 90s) of going to dance
performances I watched with interest men dressed in black (lots of leather) who
discussed the boys they admired. I wondered why it was that these men could
openly talk about the boys while I could not about the girls without feeling
like a freak/fiend. It was Arts Umbrella
Artistic Director Artemis Gordon who set it straight for me when she told me
that in dance we go to see beautiful, in shape, and graceful men and women with
wonderful bodies dance. That sounded right to me. And most recently Gordon told
her class of graduates students, “We must not forget as José Limón ( a famous
and now dead Mexican born choreographer) said that choreography for men is
simply men dancing.”
I remember going to an Arts Umbrella May Gala event at the Richmon Gateway Theatre some years ago (one
this May 21, 22, and 23 at the Playhouse) and being asked by someone why I was
there. I simply told them, “I am here to see the men dance.” You can imagine
the reaction!
Now I have a new crop of dancers to admire, photograph
and write about. There are five of them and they all dance with the Arts
Umbrella Dance Company. Not only have I seen them in performance and in rehearsals but I have also had chats with them. They are all different
and have unique personal styles. They are precise in their dance technique but
somehow ooze charm and are articulate in speech. I am not sure this is all a coincidence. Dancers, be they men or women are all like
that. Your chance to see the five boys and all those girls will start this Thursday (see below).
Arts Umbrella Dance Company Season Finale May 21, 22 and 23 at the Vancouver Playhouse
Men/boys from the Arts Umbrella Dance Company
Boys! Boys! Boys!
The Body Beautiful Alastair Macaulay
Arts Umbrella Dance Company Season Finale May 21, 22 and 23 at the Vancouver Playhouse
Men/boys from the Arts Umbrella Dance Company
Boys! Boys! Boys!
The Body Beautiful Alastair Macaulay
Myron- Diskobolus - Roman copy of a bronze original of the 5th century BC British Museum |