Atlantic Unbound
FEBRUARY 1997
THE ARTS &
ENTERTAINMENT PREVIEW

Dance and Theater
By Austin Baer and Nancy Dalva
Chrysler Corporation


TAYLOR'S BITTERSWEET SEASON

Taylor's Dancers
Photo: Lois Greenfield
Just back from touring in India, the Paul Taylor Dance Company enjoys a home season this month (City Center Theatre, New York, February 25-March 9; 212-581-1212). Who better to warm us at the end of winter? Taylor's gang is at one of its gorgeous peaks now, the dancers sunny and seasoned, and capable in both Taylorian modes: the dark and the light. For some forty years Taylor has presented us with fascinating portraits of a mind divided--with dances of innocence and experience. Somehow over time even Taylor's lightest romps have acquired, for the susceptible, an undertone of wistfulness. The dances have stayed evergreen, and the dancers seem every year to grow younger, but we--Taylor and his faithful--have grown older. Never underestimate chagrin d'amour, nostalgia, and the other milder sorrows, for their perfume is potent. Taylor's latest work is redolent of all these and more. Set to Ralph Vaughan Williams, Eventide is a melancholic ode to loss, replete with beautiful partnerings and partings. If this dance makes you reach for your hankie, it is because Taylor evokes so clearly what is being lost (the separation engendered not by whim but by death). There is tribute being paid here, and there is recognition; for those who have loved (and lost), it is a valedictory and, in its sunset way, a celebration. Here, as in his other recent work (such as Company B), Taylor's opposites are finally converging: the dark and the light meet, at dusk. Happily, the choreographer has turned for his other new dance toward the future, taking up the work of David Israel, an accomplished young composer-scholar (and balletomane). Prime Numbers takes its shape from Israel's Dance Suite for Solo Cello, a piece inspired by the city of New York. "There are parallels between architecture and music," Israel says. Small wonder the choreographer has turned to mathematics! (After City Center the company tours throughout the spring, with stops in Buffalo, Kansas City, Richmond, New London, Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia, among other cities.) --N.D.

| February 1997 Cover Page | Pop and Jazz | Classical |


ENTER THE QUEEN

Vanessa Redgrave
Redgrave on the throne
Photo: Albert Watson

Ten years ago New York's Public Theater embarked on a Shakespeare Marathon, ticking off the thirty-six plays of the canon, with mostly lackluster results punctuated by the occasional revelation. Campbell Scott's Pericles, in 1991, was one. As we approach the finish line, there is the prospect of another: Vanessa Redgrave as Egypt's queen in Antony and Cleopatra (February 18-March 30; 212-239-6200). Roughly a generation ago, in an unfortunate London production, Redgrave portrayed a cringing, clinging creature, miserably dependent on her man. Directing herself this time, she will surely know better than to suppress her mercurial intelligence, her sovereign irony, her full powers of incantation. Though no one can do everything the part demands, seldom has an actress brought more to the role. --A.B.

| February 1997 Cover Page | Pop and Jazz | Classical |




A MAMMOTH TALE RETURNS TO NEW HAVEN

Thorton Wilder
Thorton's wilder side
Illustration: Edmund Guy

Once a season the renowned Yale Rep turns the main stage over to the third-year students at the scarcely less renowned Yale School of Drama. In view of an alumni roster that lists Meryl Streep and Angela Bassett, these theatricals en famille always generate quite a buzz. This year's play is The Skin of Our Teeth, which had its world premiere at a commercial New Haven theater in 1942 with Elia Kazan in charge of a fancy cast featuring Tallulah Bankhead, Frederic March, and Montgomery Clift. Part Our Town, part Finnegans Wake, Wilder's second big play depicts the cycles of human history as enacted by the household of Mr. and Mrs. George Antrobus, a family fit for the brush of Norman Rockwell. At the final curtain, having come through the Ice Age, the Flood, and global war, they are back where they started, headed for another round. Unveiled against a backdrop of world conflict, the comic panache of The Skin of Our Teeth must have seemed a brave affirmation of human resilience. Three years later came the Big Bang at Hiroshima, since which Wilder's optimism has sounded more like whistling in the dark. Yet the play endures, confronting us now with the question "What forces--in nature, in man--keep driving us to the brink of extinction?" (February 20-March 15; 203-432-1234.) --A.B.

| February 1997 Cover Page | Pop and Jazz | Classical |


Austin Baer is a writer based in New York.
Nancy Dalva is working on a series of essays on Merce Cunningham

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Copyright © 1997 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights reserved.


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