REVIEW: Twyla Tharp talks

Dance

Dance critics like to use the word “language” in describing the highly identifiable steps, movement chains, and tonality associated with choreographers of stature. At sight, you know it is Balanchine, Taylor, or Cunningham. You know it’s Fosse or Cole. But that metaphor often does not get extended to the query of whether or not, in drawing upon his or her proprietary dance language, a choreographer conducts an actual conversation. In the so-important revival of “Diabelli,” a little-seen work by Twyla Tharp dating from 1998, an unfettered dance maker demonstrates the witty, brilliant, tender, and zany chatter that Tharp, herself a loquacious person, could foster, at the top of her game, in response to great music. In this case, to Beethoven’s masterful “Diabelli Variations,” a notorious, fifty-minute-long monster of a solo piano outing dating from 1823 that is delivered con brio by Vladimir Rumyantsev from a baby grand in the orchestra pit. Those lucky enough to listen in on Tharp’s razor-sharp dance-banter will emerge elated. The reconstruction of “Diabelli,” seen at the Younes and Soraya Nazarian Performing Arts Center last weekend, is the happening event of Tharp’s current 60th anniversary tour headed to New York City Center. Despite its unfortunate pairing on the program with a contemporaneous Tharp work, “Slacktide,” to one of Philip Glass’s less compelling scores, nothing could topple the majesty of “Diabelli.”

Bless her, Tharp has studiously prepared thirty-three discrete vignettes (it’s a lot) with smooth transitions between. One of my audiences processed the segmented structure with polite silence. The next day, I returned for an audience with an insistent bozo (it only takes one) who punctuated the hour with interruptive applause, such a pity. (Some of the more adventurous tidbits do merit applause.) Tharp responds to Mr. B’s (er … Beethoven) musical morsels, from somber dirges to rolling arpeggios, with classical balletic rigor graced by her inimitable tongue-in-cheek fillips.

It is a work, foremost, of crafty leaps and lifts that appear almost magically. With no foreshadowing, a dancer pops in space in a clean split leap. A woman held between two men like a plank is carried off stage like a surfboard. A female dancer soars through space to land on a male dancer’s shoulder—how? how? 

The music is sublime. A grand chord progression mounting the keyboard is matched by a girl whipped around her partner’s torso with momentum, pausing only to telegraph distinct shapes. She is held at his side like a sword in its sheath, or cozy in his arms like the rescue of a damsel in distress. Her fanciful “trip around the world” ends in a swan dive.

“Diabelli” features walks imported from Monty Python’s Department of Funny ones. A parade of minimalist ones, simple walks that sink into plie, provide an amuse-bouche for the nearly nonstop meal to follow. There’s a militaristic march with hands on hips. There’s a courtly quadrille that calls for rustling satin skirts and men in powdered wigs. To Beethovian chord-blocks the dancers go small, making little hops in place, hands tightened into fists and held behind backs.

Did I mention turning? Tharp sends her “A” troupe through backward-spun attitude turns. Spectacular for their balance and beauty as, with nary a visible wobble, they revolve in near slow motion . What’s on view is the elegant “C” curve of the highly trained dancer’s attitude position.

“Diabelli” screams for smart costumes. Tharp Instead sends great dancers before the public in dated black body-hiding jumpsuits with clownish little dickies painted with fake men’s ties. This is a diminution: of the dancers, of Tharp’s noble choreography, and certainly of her baby-boomer audience who go squinty after fifty minute of watching darkness. What was Tharp thinking? It brings the memory of the terrible togs in which she (and Santo Loquasto) dressed Baryshnikov in “Push Comes to Shove.” And the tasteless ones of her 50th anniversary tour.  

slacktide costumes

Thus one felt despair that the second work of the program, “Slacktide,” opened on a dark stage populated by dancers in black. At least this work received a Latin-adjacent backdrop projection in orangey-red. To a bubbly, if derivative, score of faux South American music by Philip Glass, replete with the breathy gaita, the South American wooden flute, Tharp at 83, dispatched a diluted version of her prior magisterial work. It was much the same dance as “Diabelli,” only lacking the pleasing formal structure — and it seemed under rehearsed. You hate seeing sallow dancers, blood drained from faces by the deluge of technical demands toward no particular end. And, only in “Slacktide”’s nod to a brown culture, did I notice the #sowhite composition of this troupe. The (divine) exception was Brazilian-born Renan Cerdeiro of Miami City Ballet. God is he a great dancer.

We recently saw the “Harry Potter” stage show with its “time turner” machine able to zoom characters across the calendar. Here’s your chance to board a dance time turner and revel in a great choreographer’s works, yes, from the last century!


Dance critic Debra Levine is founder/editor/publisher of arts●meme.

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BEST IN SHOW: A tour of Oscar-nominated international movies of 2024

Film
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Fernanda Torres, I’m Still Here

Each year it’s the best of world cinema, delivered to your doorstep. The competition for Best International Feature Film is my personal favorite part of awards season, and the crop of films released in 2024 did not disappoint. Depending on your tastes and preferences, any of the five movies up for Oscar gold in this category could easily top your movie experience of the year.

This year’s selections, a cream-of-crop distillation, notably feature stories with women at their center. That certainly applies to Oscar front runner Emilia Perez, with 13 nominations, distributed in the US by Netflix, and entered by France. Helped in no small part by the streamer’s marketing muscle, it’s no less deserving of the glowing reviews and awards it has garnered along the way.

It has also garnered gobs of publicity, if not hype. But it’s worth stressing what an audacious movie Emelia Perez truly is. A Spanish-language musical about a Mexican cartel leader who wants to transition to become a woman and start life anew? Now that’s pushing the envelope. Star Karla Sofía Gascón’s trail of offensive Tweets notwithstanding, it’s her undeniably brilliant performance as Emilia that has pulled this deserving film into the spotlight. But I still maintain that it’s Zoe Zaldana, playing Emilia’s conflicted confidant, who steals the show and elevates director Jacques Audiard’s movie to a must see. It’s still in cinemas (where it really should be viewed). It’s also streaming on Netflix.

I’m Still Here, happy family scene

As much as I enjoyed Emilia Perez, my personal favorite is Brazilian director Walter Salles’ I’m Still Here, a movie that, per its spot-on title, is a tribute to human resilience. Based on a true story, it stars Fernanda Torres as Eunice Paiva, a wife and mother whose idyllic life in Rio de Janeiro is shattered by the arrest and ‘disappearance’ of her husband Rubens Paiva (Selton Mello) in 1971, during the period of military rule in Brazil. Far from a history lesson, what emerges instead is a lesson from history – as one woman’s determination to protect her family deepens to depict her steadfast, determined, and lifelong struggle for justice. I’m Still Here is a powerfully emotional film, and Torres’ subtle, understated performance is arguably the best on any screen this year. A contender for three Oscars (Best Picture, Best International Feature and Best Actress) I’m Still Here is playing exclusively in cinemas.

Winner of the Special Jury prize at Cannes, the German candidate, The Seed of the Sacred Fig, another must-see, is a psychological drama charting the implosion of a Tehranian family that is triggered by the Iranian state’s brutal political crackdown happening beyond the walls of their modest apartment.  

The plot centers on Iman (Missagh Zareh), a dignified, well-meaning man who at the film’s outset is promoted to the position of a judge in the Tehranian legal system. He soon understands, however, that his true job is summarily approving death sentences. A gun given to him for personal protection one day goes missing. This simple plot point galvanizes a rift in Iman’s once-close family – wife, Najmeh (Soheila Golestani) and two liberal if sheltered daughters, twenty-something Rezvan (Mahsa Rostami) and younger sister, Sana (Setareh Maleki). These three women, the film’s true protagonists, ultimately pay the price as Iman’s paranoia spirals out of control.

Shot in secret in early 2024, director Mohammad Rasoulof was forced into exile before the film’s Cannes premiere. Completed in Germany (Seed is Germany’s official Oscar entry), the film liberally incorporates Iranian political protest footage captured on iPhones, underscoring the reality behind an unnerving domestic drama. Seed of the Sacred Fig is currently screening in Los Angeles at the Lumiere Musical Hall and on-demand.

For those who like their psychological horror, twisted, bleak, and downright creepy, director Magnus von Horn has a lovely treat in store for you. Denmark’s official Oscar entry, The Girl With The Needle, set in the wake of WWI, is loosely based on the true story of that country’s most notorious serial killer, Dagmar Overbye (Trine Dyrholm), whose shady adoption service for the newborn children of destitute women, shall we say, left much to be desired. The story is told through the eyes of the desperate if naïve Karoline (Vic Carmen Sonne), who, with nowhere else to go, arrives one day at Dagmar’s door with babe in arms. Filmed in glorious, high-contrast black and white, the scenario is deeply disturbing (and mercifully non-sensationalist), but the film’s mesmerizing power owes its thanks largely to Carmen Sonne’s performance, reminiscent of a latter-day silent film star.

Finally, hats off to Latvia’s Flow! The star of this animated movie, a nameless black cat, landed on his feet with Oscar nominations in both the Animation and International Film categories. A favorite in European and US animation circles (and a critical darling to boot), Flow is lovingly directed by Latvian animator Gints Zilbalodis. It follows the cat’s attempt to survive a flood of epic proportion in a world where humans no longer exist. To that end, our heroic loner eventually joins a posse of fellow displaced animals, a ragtag crew that manages to overcome differences as they collaborate to survive. Notably, the animals in Zilbalodis’ world are not anthropomorphized, thus do not ‘speak’ (as in zero dialogue). And yet, they communicate profoundly with each other, and with audiences along for their magical journey. The film’s digital animation has a hand-drawn aesthetic, and is suitable for kids and adults alike. Flow is currently playing in select theaters and available on-demand. A special 4K edition of the film will be released by The Criterion Collection later this year.


Steven Goldman is a member of the Critics Choice Association.

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Out of the blue, an accident: Margot Rose’s ‘Unconditional’ at Skylight Theatre

Reviews · Theater
Melina Young, Margot Rose – photo: Sherry Ryan Barnett for SPLASH Some people transmit their profound life experiences in autobiographies. Others, in memoirs. Playwright/performer Margot Rose has fashioned a proprietary genre, a “musical memoir,” as a live-theater experience. The one-act show’s title, “Unconditional,” ostensibly refers to the quality of unbound love that she tapped, in ...

Free tix! Twyla Tharp, Sunday at The Soraya

Dance
Yeppie, it’s Twyla. Twyla’s back and The Soraya‘s got her. First at the Segerstrom Center and then, this coming weekend at the Younes & Soraya Nazarian Center for the Arts, February 22 and 23, Tharp is hitting the stage with fourteen best-in-class dancers in a 60th anniversary of her career as a choreographer. Here’s what ...

Oscar-nominated designers in 15th annual costume panel at the Egyptian

Fashion · Film
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High fliers in Brooklyn: STREB’s ‘Do Not Try This At Home’

Dance
photo credit: stephanie berger High-octane and daring. Action-packed and gravity defying. Surely we’re describing Hollywood stunt work, right? Wrong! We’re talking about rarefied choreography of extreme physicality, innovation, and near-misses that have made Elizabeth Streb a genre leader in this limit-pushing display of human action. Others in this niche of dance that we have written ...

Ratmansky rocks the classical ballet form, in ‘Paquita’ for New York City Ballet

Dance
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Rarefied air: Justin Peck’s new work at New York City Ballet

Dance · Reviews
Mystic Familiar, choreography by Justin Peck, photo: Erin Baiano The symmetry is uncanny. Almost exactly eight years ago, on January 26, 2017 – six days after an impactful inauguration — Justin Peck delivered a robustly explosive, invigorating ballet, The Times Are Racing. Set to four sections of Dan Deacon’s 2012 album “America,” it throbbed with ...

Twyla Tharp, irrepressible, meets Beethoven, Philip Glass, for Jubilee Tour

Dance
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Ed. note: This story by Susan Reiter, commissioned and published by the Younes & Soraya Nazarian Center for the Arts, is reprinted with permission. Twyla Tharp: The name is distinctive and memorable. So, too, are the accolades the choreographer has accumulated over decades in the creative artist’s lane. Now, at 83, the Tony/MacArthur/Primetime Emmy/Kennedy Center/Guggenheim ...

Haunting new Vivaldi opera a cautionary tale at Guggenheim ‘Works & Process’

Music · Reviews
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In these cataclysmic times it sometimes seems that, if we’re looking for leadership out of an existential crisis, we need artists more than we do politicians. That thought occurred to me two weeks ago, while wildfires ravaged Los Angeles and New York shivered through an Arctic vortex, and I sat in the auditorium of the ...