Dance in Review

Monday, 24 October 2022 15:25

Giordano Dance Chicago's 'Catch the Light' A spectacular 60th Anniversary Celebration at the Harris Theatre! Featured

L-R Ashley Downs and Adam Houston L-R Ashley Downs and Adam Houston Photo by Todd Rosenberg

Nan Giordano, Giordano Dance Chicago’s Artistic Director and daughter of founder Gus Giordano, credits its devoted Board of Directors for GDC’s survival through ‘the dark years’ of the pandemic: “Beauty, Energy, Unity and Community are abundant.” Lockdown lifted just in time for the company’s 60th anniversary show, fittingly named CATCH THE LIGHT.

The show begins with “Giordano Moves”, originally choreographed in 2005 by Gus Giordano and reconstructed in 2022 by Nan Giordano and Cesar G. Salinas. I’m intrigued by the use of 13 dancers – an odd number, yet the stage and action are perfectly balanced throughout. “Giordano Moves” features the essence of the classic Giordano technique, energized by active pelvis and precise, unconventional shoulder placement, with powerful jumps and turns.  The dance acts as a translation from the language of jazz music into the lexicon of the human body.

“commonthread”, choreographed in 2009 by Autumn Eckman, has a ritualistic feel to it, enhanced by Kam Hobb’s masterful light design. “commonthread” begins with five dancers huddled about a pulsating red light, like aboriginals crouching around a fire. As the music evolves the dancers unspool yet retain the primitive undercurrent. My companion (who studied dance growing up in Siberia) envisioned druids performing ancient rites in a primeval forest.

“Impulse”, created in 2006 by Tony Powell and reconstructed 2022 by Cesar G. Salinas, is a stirring yet unsettling experience. The dancers appear to be naked in flesh-colored leotards. Their angular and acrobatic movements are complemented by the music, which includes Ethos Percussion Group and Kodo Drummers of Japan. My mind kept conjuring words like abrasive, harsh, dehumanizing, even gruesome.  A performance that invokes such descriptors yet remains totally captivating is rare indeed.  

At the interval I asked a little girl (8 or 9, perhaps?) for her thoughts; she said, “They don’t have words like a play does, but they speak to us.”

“Groove, in formed” was created in 2019 by Peter Chu. Mr. Chu says, “[music & dance] connects humans at a profound level … rhythms can heal and bring communities together during times of sadness, grief, love, and joy”. The dance begins with a saxophone keening as half the dancers lug the others about: inanimate objects, to be positioned and postured like marionettes until a syncopated percussion returns them to life. “Groove, in formed” includes an exquisite male/male pas de deux. I’m partial to male/male pairings in art and performance – I wish the Olympic figure skating included male/male partner skaters: only imagine how fabulous if both skaters could perform lifts and throws! 

Or maybe I just like seeing boys with boys. Any road ….

We are treated to a world premiere of “lub-dub”, choreographed by Cesar G. Salinas, former GDC dancer and newly appointed Associate Artistic Director. The artist conceived the dance as representative of ‘the normal rhythms of the heart on auscultation’, which was my immediate association as well. The spectacular lighting illuminates the swirling skirts of the dancer’s red waistcoats – like the traffic of red corpuscles, unifying through the driving rhythms.

The final piece, “Soul”, was choreographed in 2018 by Ray Leeper in honor of Chicago philanthropist Candace Jordan. Always a crowd-pleaser, three well-known and beloved songs make for a spectacular ending. Imagination, by Gladys Knight and the Pips, features dancers in abbreviated black formalwear with sapphire bowties on the males and cummerbunds on the girls. At the end of the song the dancers all seem to drop to the ground, which I interpret as homage to the shooting deaths that are wreaking such havoc. In Al Green’s Can’t Get Next to You, various one duos play mating games onstage. And the finale, Tina Turner singing Proud Mary, brought the entire house to its feet. The standing ovation persisted through one curtain call after another; when the ensemble finally left the stage it was only to reappear dancing through the aisles. What a celebration!

Giordano Dance Chicago has done far more than simply survive the pandemic – it has used “the dark years” as a springboard, returning to the stage with all its elegance and vitality not simply revived but enriched.

Nan Giordano Artistic Director   

Michael McSraw Executive Director

ENSEMBLE: Brittany Brown, Joseph Cyranski, Ashley Downs, Ryan Galloway, Rosario Guillen, Amanda Hickey, Adam Houston, Emma Kempson, Sasha Lazarus, Zachary Morris, Skyler Newcom, Katie Rafferty, Fernando Rodriguez, Eduardo Zambrana

 

 

         17 Years and counting!

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