Monday, May 27, 2013

Dance: Polina Semionova with American Ballet Theater in Don Quixote, May 27, 2013

Found online:

"Based on Miguel de Cervantes' sweeping tale of romance and chivalry, the knight-errant of la Mancha, Don Quixote, and his devoted squire, Sancho Panza, are positively heroic when it comes to aiding the spirited maiden Kitri and her charming amour. From the bravura dancing of the fiery toreador Espada to the colorful caravan of gypsies, the stage explodes with one show-stopping performance after another in this feast of choreographic fireworks."

Here is a review from the New York Times of her performance in 2011.


Thursday, May 23, 2013

Plimpton's NYC apartment - party

Film: Plimpton! Starring George Plimpton as Himself

Found online:
"Witty, sophisticated, urbane and yet a man of the people, [George Plimpton] embodied the American optimism of 1960s and '70s. He co-founded and edited one of the most influential literary magazines in history, The Paris Review for 50 years, and in the process, he innovated a writing technique called participatory journalism. This gave Plimpton a unique perspective on the activities he wrote about, perhaps most famously with Paper Lion, a bestseller, which has never left the conversation of the greatest sports books of all-time."

http://www.filmlinc.com/films/on-sale/plimpton-starring-george-plimpton-as-himself

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Dance: Rennie Harris Awe-inspiring Works (RHAW)

Consider me a big fan, officially, as of right now.

Rennie Harris is a living master and the performance today by his pre-professional dance company was beyond words; okay - throw at it "beautiful, exhilarating, amazing." "Awe-inspiring" is correct.  Dr. Harris (with an honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts from Bates College) has a professional pedigree that includes the Alvin Ailey Award for Choreography, three Bessie Awards and a 2010 Guggenheim Fellowship. His professional company is called "Rennie Harris Puremovement" - but today's RHAW dancers at the New Victory Theater (NYC, 5/19/13) already made the grade. I had to take a big breath at intermission to keep from crying. It was that good.

Here's the review in the New York Times.

It was especially interesting to see this hip-hop performance after recently seeing "The Spectators" by Pam Tanowitz (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/17/arts/dance/the-spectators-at-new-york-live-arts.html?_r=0). If you had an itemized list of features to compare the two dance programs, the RHAW hip hoppers would still be top dog for:  inventiveness, energy, formal choreographic structures, emotional connection, profound physical training and sheer joy. In addition, even though the RHAW music choices tended to be obvious, it at least helps to develop in dancers that extra bit of magic: musicality. No matter how diligently Ms. Tamowitz chips away at the ballet vocabulary, the only emotional response I heard in the audience around me was a chuckle of recognition when one dancer, with curved modern-dance spine, beat her balletic legs together. Compare this to Mr. Harris' work where the audience gasps unexpectedly again and again - and for the subtler reasons as well as the smashing big ones.

 

  http://www.rennieharrisrhaw.org

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Film at MoMA: Old Dog

Kent called it "a sketch of a poem."  In Tibet: a childless couple, an old man and his dog, a policeman and a school teacher; in a setting of new town construction, grassland hills, ruins of lost villages, a pastoral simple shepherd's home; populated by sheep, goats, pigs, motorcycles, ponies, trucks and cars. A pool table is set up and played in a muddy street. An infomercial on TV shamelessly tries to sell gold jewelry to people who can barely get signal reception. What will become of the old dog?


Found online:



Old Dog

2011. China. Directed by Pema Tseden. With Yanbum Gyal, Droluma Kyab, Lochey. A young Tibetan decides to sell his family's nomad mastiff, an exotic dog that fetches a fortune from wealthy Chinese. His aging father opposes him, leading to a series of tragicomic events that threaten to tear the family apart. Pema Tseden is the leading filmmaker of a newly emerging Tibetan cinema, and the first director in China to film his movies entirely in the Tibetan language. His third feature, Old Dog employs an observational documentary approach that soberly depicts the erosion of Tibetan culture under the pressures of contemporary society. Courtesy of dGenerate/Icarus. 88 min.


http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/film_screenings/18237

Monday, May 13, 2013

Film: In the House

Found online:

Anthony Lane: "In the House" Review : The New Yorker, APRIL 29, 2013

"It seems not just against the odds but against the laws of nature that a film as bookish, as suburban, and as self-consciously clever as "In the House" should also be such fun. To make things even more unlikely, it's about a teacher, and the nearest it comes to an action sequence is when someone photocopies a math test. There is sex, of course, this being a French movie, but it's extremely brief, and, most outrageous of all, it occurs between two people who are married to each other. What, then, is the appeal?

Our unheroic hero is Germain (Fabrice Luchini), who teaches literature at the Lycée Gustave Flaubert—a first hint that the application of style, at whatever cost, will lurk at the movie's heart. Germain is married, childlessly, to Jeanne (Kristin Scott Thomas), who runs an art gallery. We sense an easy rapport between them; she doesn't object when he reads Freud's "Civilization and Its Discontents" in bed, and she enjoys listening when he comes home and reads out his pupils' essays to her, the better to grumble about the narrowness of their minds. But wait.

One essay is by a boy named Claude (Ernst Umhauer), who recounts that he went to see Rapha (Bastien Ughetto), a fellow-pupil, ostensibly to help with math homework. As Claude admits, however, he used to stand in the park opposite Rapha's place, the previous summer, and watch; now, "at 11 a.m., I rang the bell, and the house finally opened up to me." As Germain reads out these words, he pauses, and glances up at Jeanne. Imperceptibly, with excitable stealth, the camera starts to move, approaching each of them in turn. They, like us—like every listener since the Sultan who summoned Scheherazade—are being lured into the spinning of a yarn. The process is both ominous and funny, all the more so because we gather, from sticky experience, that the yarn will turn out to be a web.

Claude has more to report. He mentions "the singular scent of a middle-class woman," which emanates from Rapha's mother, Esther (Emmanuelle Seigner). One sniff is enough. Henceforth, in pursuit of her, Claude will return repeatedly to the scene of the crime—or, at least, of his voyeuristic sins—and try to transcribe, in a series of essays, both his exploits and the flux of his feelings. On the strength of these, Germain starts to coach him after hours, at school, arguing that Claude, as a type of proto-novelist, ought to refine his powers of description. The kid is told to write more coolly, then with more passion; like Flaubert, like Dostoevsky, and so on. We find ourselves, in other words, in a late-flowering offshoot of one of the great modernist ambitions, which reached full bloom in "Ulysses": the urge to try out every conceivable style, not as a show of skill but in a bid to grasp a world so rich and multifarious that it threatens, or rejoices, to elude our clutches. Truth is stranger than diction.

All of which makes "In the House" sound less like a movie and more like a novel itself. In fact, it is directed by François Ozon, who has ranged prolifically from bright pastiche, in "8 Women" and "Potiche," to grave studies of grief and desire, like "Under the Sand" and "Time to Leave." He has flirted with literary artifice before, in "Angel," but the result rang strangely and determinedly false. In the new film, though, his tuning is exact, his actors miss not a trick, and, without our really noticing, his story dances along at a rattling rate. Ozon, like Pedro Almodóvar, is too wise to look down on melodrama, and some of Claude's incursions into Rapha's family are pricked with unabashed suspense—helped by the shyly smiling Umhauer, whose performance as Claude lies within stroking distance of devilry, with the cheekbones to match.

Luchini makes the ideal foil, for, as Germain, he clings to the softest of delusions—the idea that, if you've read enough books, you are cushioned against the shocks of body and soul, and are obviously too astute to wind up as a dupe. Eyes widening behind his glasses, he digs himself irretrievably deep into the fates of the other characters, and lets go of his own. The most urgent debt here is to "Céline and Julie Go Boating," the Jacques Rivette film in which two young women keep entering a house of mystery and staggering out again, a while later, as if high on pure narrative. As for Ozon's final image, it nods in glowing tribute to "Rear Window." The house of fiction, as Henry James said, has many windows, front as well as rear, and "In the House" stares through just one of them, at a minor crisis in the life of the bourgeoisie. Yet the view it affords is at once so silvery-clear and so misted with longing and confusion that, unexpectedly, it draws us close to heartache. Germain is a hero of sorts, by the end, because he has the courage to lose everything to our unhealable human sickness: the need to know. "

http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/cinema/2013/04/29/130429crci_cinema_lane?mobify=0

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Theater: The Caucasian Chalk Circle, 5/11/13

From the web: http://www.classicstage.org/season/chalkcircle/

By BERTOLT BRECHT
New Music by DUNCAN SHEIK
Directed by BRIAN KULICK
"Terrible is the temptation to do good!" warns Bertolt Brecht's amiable narrator. But good is all that Grusha, the simple kitchen maid, knows. And so, in the midst of a revolution, she cannot help but come to the aid of a poor defenseless infant. Their subsequent misadventures across her war-torn country become the heart of Brecht's playful parable, which calls into question our basic assumptions of right in a world that has gone wrong. This production boasts a new score and new songs by acclaimed singer/songwriter Duncan Sheik and is helmed by CSC Artistic Director Brian Kulick, who directed last season's sold-out production of Brecht's GALILEO.
 Cast
JASON BABINSKY, ELIZABETH A. DAVIS, TOM RIIS FARRELL, ALEX HURT, CHRISTOPHER LLOYD, DEB RADLOFF, MARY TESTA
Scenic Design TONY STRAIGES
Costume Design ANITA YAVICH
Lighting Design JUSTIN TOWNSEND
Sound Design MATT KRAUS

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Music: Violinist Benjamin Beilman, Merkin Hall, May 7, 2013


Music:  Violinist Benjamin Beilman, Merkin Hall, May 7, 2013

Artists: Yekwon Sunwoo (Piano); Benjamin Beilman (Violin)

Poulenc: Sonata for Violin and Piano
Brahms: Sonata for Violin and Piano no 2 in A major, Op. 100
Messiaen: Fantasie for Violin and Piano
Schubert: Fantasy for Violin and Piano in C major, D 934/Op. posth. 159

Music: Attacca Quartet, May 7, 2013



Amy Schroeder – Violin
Luke Fleming – Viola
Keiko Tokunaga – Violin
Andrew Yee – Cello
Alice Tully Hall Recital – New York, NY
The 20th Annual Lisa Arnhold Memorial Concert
Program:
Haydn: String Quartet No. 55 in D major, Op. 71 no. 2
Bartók: String Quartet No. 6, Sz. 114 (1939)
Intermission
Dvořák: String Quartet No. 13 in G major, Op. 106

CUFF Film 2013: That F***ing Elevator





That Fucking Elevator 8 min 
Written and Directed by Jim Garvey
Produced by Lindsay Tolbert

CUFF Film 2013: Above the Sea





Above the Sea 17 min 
Written and Directed by Keola Racela
Produced by Lily Niu

CUFF Film 2013: Made in Chinatown




Made in Chinatown 17 min 
Directed by Kevin Lau
Written by Kevin Lau, Nyssa Chow
Produced by Javian Le, Amanda Garque

CUFF Film 2013: Sweet Corn




Written and Directed by Joo Hyun Lee
Produced by Jaeung Yii, Yong Jae Park

Friday, May 3, 2013

Puppetry Theater: Le Clan des Songes in "Fragile"


From the web:
"In FRAGILE, a wordless work of magical puppet theater, a charming Chaplinesque compagnon finds that the road on which he travels curves and changes—and also happens to wobble, wiggle, droop and tease. With only his can-do spirit and a suitcase, our earnest French friend shows us that pluck and resilience can make marvelous adventures out of irksome obstacles. The company’s stunningly simple puppetry is set to enchanting original music, gently introducing a world that is as human and realistic as it is dreamy and whimsical."

Below is a picture I took of Peppito with Marina Montefusco, his creator-director-playwright. She leads the ensemble named Le Clan des Songes. "Fragile" is a perfect example of the potential of "small" - here, a very small ensemble of creatives (3 puppeteers and a composer) of high integrity have produced a perfect piece of theater. Focused. Inventive. Emotional. Bravo! Sending appreciation to the various French cultural services for collaborating to bring this ensemble to NYC in 2013.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Dance: The Royal Ballet of Cambodia, BAM, NYC, May 2, 2013

As Princess Buppha Devi explained during her interview and introduction to traditional Cambodian dance (April 30th at NYPL for the Performing Arts), the dancers are "performing for the deceased" and their movements are dignified to be "in harmony with the gods." Tonight I saw the company perform "The Legend of Apsara Mera."  The dancers were scintillating in their glittering costumes, performing with myriad and minute gestural detail in a landscape of slow motion, balance and restraint.  They reminded me of stars in a night sky: an alignment of flickering lights moving slowly across a field of space and time, invested profoundly with significance but distant from human emotions or needs.  - dp

Music: Orchestra for the Next Century, Merkin Hall, NYC, April 30, 2013


STRAVINSKY: Concerto in D for String Orchestra *
MARGARET BROUWER: Violin Concerto (NY Premiere)
        Michi Wiancko, Violin Soloist
PAUL MORAVEC: Morph, for String Orchestra
MARTINŮ: Double Concerto for Two String Orchestras, Piano & Timpani*
        Yael Manor, Piano