Choreographer's Diary
by Leigh Witchel
Day 13 - August 13, 1999
34 days until performance
Things go better today.
I find the final man, Abraham, who was recommended by several
dancers as having clean lines and being available. When I see
him in class, I realize he's smaller than I'd like (about 5'7")
but has a good look and very good lines. I think the smallness
might become an advantage in Horizon. The other two men
I have, Barry and Ted, are about 5'6" and 6'1"
respectively - but Adriana and Mary, who, along with Frances
are the cast in Horizon, are about 5'5", 5'1"
and 5'6" (The decision was based primarily on schedules.
Morgan has the tightest schedule, so she's in two ballets instead
of three.) If Frances and Ted are in the center and Adriana &
Abraham and Mary & Barry at either side, I'm hoping that
Abraham's size when partnered with Adriana will balance the side
couples a bit more.
In Armature, however,
I put Abraham with Morgan, and begin to make a simple pas de
deux on them. I have them enter from opposite corners to meet
each other, and spend the first five minutes getting Abraham
to think about walking properly. He's got great raw material,
and clean training, but unsurprisingly, he's rough around the
edges. He can do double saut de
basques, and point his feet, but he can't walk, yet. It's the
placement of his head on his neck, he juts it forward. If one
walks with one's neck craning forward, one looks rather savage.
Movement habits are not erased by a single correction, though.
I correct him repeatedly, but attempt to be encouraging about
it.
Most of the vocabulary
I'm using is simple, but very exposing, and I seem to be drawn
to the Cecchetti ports de bras with the opposition in the shoulders.
Why? I was never trained by a Cecchetti teacher, so the attraction
to me is a small mystery, but in this ballet I seem to be looking
for a pre-Balanchine épaulement. As harrowing as silence
is to the dancers (it's twice as hard to retain steps isolated
from music) I love watching the combinations in silence. It focuses
your eyes. For a work that is very conservative in vocabulary,
it all feels very experimental to me. If this year has taught
me anything, it's that one can experiment around the edges of
a form, but it's also very possible and very healthy to experiment
within the center as well.
Morgan and Abraham's
pas de deux is derived from the opening phrases from the previous
day, reverences become more central because there are two people
dancing with each other. They meet, bow to each other, he offers
his hand, she takes it and walks under his arm to pose in ecarté.
The dance continues like that, and it wasn't until I heard Frances
softly humming the music from the grand pas de deux in act III
of Sleeping Beauty that I realized consciously what I
was doing. I hadn't stolen any choreography, but the Kirov Beauty
had unquestionably gotten under my skin. It's another one of
the pleasures of choreography. When I see what I make in the
studio, I know what had been filling my head in the interim.
Tanztheatre and Cunningham in
other years, now the Kirov and Paris. It's always ballet, that's
what I know, but the accenting is different each year and each
work.
I make small solos for
each of the women next. I learnt yesterday that I had my work
cut out for me, because the palette of movement I want most for
this ballet is really only natural to Frances. Adriana was trained
at the Joffrey, she moves beautifully but she's athletic, not
delicate. Morgan is delicate, and has a beautiful back and arms,
but they are so flexible that she's almost never orthodox. So
I start to try and make solos for them that take the way they
each move and make it look as clean and classical as possible.
Adriana senses I'm perplexed about her ports de bras, she keeps
asking me "Can you just tell me a little clearer what you
want? If you can tell me, I can do it." She's right, the
problem is, I can't quite tell her. So I make a solo that works
with what she does, very aerial. She laughs softly at one point,
"It's a man's variation!" It isn't, but it is a variation
for a jumping female. It very well might be one of Adriana's
nagging fears that her ability to jump and turn means that she's
not very feminine and I'd rather not exacerbate that.
Frances' section contains
more ports de bras than Adriana's, but also several difficult
turns, and I try to make use of her precision, the very quality
that was giving her a hard time in Scherzo Fantastique. She
retains the steps much faster today than yesterday, I'm glad
some of the tension is gone. For Morgan, I try to soften the
unorthodoxy of her arms, getting her to move just a little less
floridly, but only a little. The moment either Adriana or Morgan
try to do things "correctly" it doesn't look correct,
it just looks strained. It's my job to make how they move naturally
look correct. When we break for the weekend, I know that I have
to decide on an order for the ballet. Once that is done, it will
fall into place.
Day
14