BY:

Merilyn Jackson 09.04.2010

The innovative choreographer Kun-Yang Lin has launched a daring dance workshop that seeks to transcend mere movement by getting inside dancers’ souls as well. It’s a fresh approach with the potential to galvanize today’s sometimes forgettable world of dance.

Kun-Yang Lin/Dancers: Body and soul workshops. Through December 5, 2010 at Chi Movement Arts Center, 1316 S. Ninth St. (267) 687-3739 or www.kunyanglin.org.

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The Solidarnosc Chronicles

The only time I was ever in Buffalo was during a January blizzard in ’84 in a van with seven heavily smoking Poles for a Solidarity conference. We stayed at the Lord and Lady Baltimore Motel. I brought goose rillettes from my Christmas geese and they loved me for that. My roommate brought extra toilet paper.

Thus begins a series of intermittent memories of my eight years spent supporting Poland’s Solidarnosc movement, mainly the underground press, which has today morphed into the leading daily Gazeta Wyborcza.

8: Olive Prince and Shavon Norris. Olive Prince, a delightful dancer, choreographed quite a good piece Thursday evening with I Desire, one of eight new works by local choreographers for the Live Arts Festival. The pieces are being presented in four sets of two.

Marie Brown, Lindsay Browning, and Nora Gibson joined Prince onstage for I Desire, while Christopher B. Farrell’s compelling score moved them through with conviction. The dancers entwined themselves by turns in root-brown vines that hung from above. Prince repeated a motif using one vine for a support for deep back-bends and later did a little aerial work with it. This was not your girly maypole dance; all four attacked the meaty choreography with gusto. While Gibson brought her purposeful presence to the piece, Prince gave it its grace.

Dancers Mina Estrada, C. Kemal Nance, and Les Rivera inhabited the second work, Shavon Norris’ The Body in Lines, so well I was less disappointed that Norris wasn’t dancing. While I Desire explored what people really want from life, Norris focused on how people label each other and their lineage.

Nance played the role of what the narration called the “scary, big black man,” who is actually a dancer and educator (as Nance is in reality). Estrada, not the kind of dancer one would expect to find in a kick line, amusingly marched the three to the opening steps of A Chorus Line. Rivera slyly snorted and loped in apelike fashion through a dance meant to mock racial stereotyping.

The two simple, yet terrific dance concepts of I Desire and The Body in Lines are good examples of how dance transfixes audiences even when they don’t quite know what they are seeing.

– Merilyn Jackson

Read more: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/magazine/102684399.html#ixzz0zRG9OUTR

Read additional coverage of the Live Arts Festival/Philly Fringe at www.philly.com/fringe. Follow Inquirer critics on Twitter at #philastage.

Takes. Everything new is old again, unless it’s newer. In Takes, dancer/choreographer Nichole Canuso uses a Sol LeWitt-style cube, as have others recently. LeWitt, the late conceptual artist, still fascinates the dance world, having started the trend of image overlay 31 years ago in Lucinda Childs’ Dance, which anchors the festival next weekend.

Canuso squares her filmy cube with media artist Lars Jan’s installation (in which, during the day, you can make your own performance by reservation). Jan’s technical and artistic wizardry perfectly follows an indeterminacy principle mirroring Canuso’s deliberately indeterminate choreography. His live projections transfer Canuso and actor/dancer Dito van Reigersberg into quadruple takes on the enclosure’s “walls.” Wherever you are sitting (or walking – it encourages), Van Reigersberg’s image might loom vertically, like a cinematic Rorschach, from one corner while Canuso’s odalisque-like body floats around the sides.

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Flying monks, undersea oddity, more

NATHANIEL TILESTON

By Merilyn Jackson

For The Inquirer

You are sitting in silence as a black-and-white freeze-frame of phantom dancers appears on a scrim across the front of the stage, the opening shot of a film by artist Sol LeWitt. Then, like a startling squall, Philip Glass’ pulsing music jolts you into vigilance and live dancers leap from the wings, turning, tilting their upper bodies sideways, arms outstretched.

The burst of flutes, voice, keyboard, and piccolo gathers turbulently as the dancers bubble across the stage in overlapping torrents – eight, but there seem to be twice as many exiting and entering, over and over, on a grid on the stage floor. The images on the scrim reanimate, oscillating, expanding the effect of a host of dancers.

You are engulfed in Dance , choreographer Lucinda Childs’ germinal 1979 work, a highlight of this year’s Live Arts Festival/Philly Fringe.

Read more: http://www.philly.com/philly/entertainment/102144029.html#ixzz0ygeTs2y5

The Old, the New, Moving Together

Posted on Tue, Mar. 2, 2010

By Merilyn Jackson

For The Inquirer

Jacques-Jean Tiziou www.jjtiziou.net

Artists in the Local Dance History Project: (top row, from left) Jano Cohen, William Robinson, Gregory Holt, Ishmael Houston-Jones, and Terry Fox; (bottom, from left) Heather Murphy, John Luna, Alie Vidich, Dan Martin, and Michael Biello. Reconstructed works are being performed by today’s dancers in the project’s two weekend programs.

This year’s installment of Philadelphia Dance Projects Presents opened Friday night with part one of the Local Dance History Project/Next Up series, tracking the city’s dance past into the future – what was, who was, what will be, and who will be dancing it.

In a preshow video at the Performance Garage, Philadelphia Dance Projects executive director Terry Fox said, “It’s important that dancers be remembered as part of the landscape of this city,” and what followed painted small pictures of that landscape.

READ FULL STORY The Old, the New, Moving Together

Paisano’s Philly Style Rocks

Well, the sandwiches at Paesano’s are not rocks, but the concepts and their execution rock. Oops, my bad saying execution in connection with a South Philly foodery, down here where so many mob hits took place after a fine last meal. These included Angelo Bruno, who had dinner with the “Geator with the Heater” Jerry Blavat within an hour of being shot in his car outside his Ninth and Snyder home, (a mere mile from Paesano’s at 901 Christian) and John Calabrese outside of a mob restaurant a year later.

The night Bruno was murdered, March 21 ,1980, my husband and I had just flown in from Jamaica, arriving at Philly airport at about 10:30 pm. I had insisted on bringing back a Ritz cracker box full of some weird pods that a gang of machete wielding domino players insisted were Jamaican Blue Mountain coffee beans. We knew they weren’t but we were alone on a “plantation” our driver had taken us to and they wanted $8 for the box. Over my husband’s objection, I paid. I don’t argue with men with machetes.

At customs, I placed the blazing bright orange plastic bag with the Ritz box on the floor in front of the counter. Not a single customs agent noticed. All were chattering away about Bruno. And that is how we could have gotten away with smuggling in a kilo of ganga, had we known.

I never thought I’d be living around the corner from the scene some 25 years later, but here I am. I’m also in what I call Food City, which I locate between and around Passyunk Avenue, the Italian Market and Whole Foods on South Street.

Much as I love to cook, grill and entertain, trolling for ready-made meals in the area is a treat too. At Fond one night I met Billy, one of the sandwich makers at Paesano’s, and he urged me to stop by. So after a Tai Chi session at Chi Movement Center just below Pat’s Steaks one too-hot-to-cook day, I headed up to Paesano’s. The Ninth and Christian location is their second and the esteemable Modo Mio at Hancock and Girard Ave runs it, as well as the first location just across Girard.

For my husband I chose a Giardina — roasted eggplant, fennel, peppers and onions, mozzarella and basil pesto.

For myself, I picked up a Paesano — beef brisket, horseradish mayo, roasted tomatoes, pepperoncino, sharp provolone and fried egg. The sweetie who waited on me said this was a very messy sandwich and not so good to go. He suggested that he hard cook the egg so it would hold until I reheated the sandwich later at home.

Both sandwiches held up well when two hours later I popped them into a 400 degree oven to toast up for 5 minutes along with the order of Potato Arrosto — “roasted with all the fat and flavor we could muster” just as the menu claims.

I will try a Paisano at the shop next time so I can get that squishy, yolky sauce squirting all over the meat and my chin. But even without it the egg, especially the whites, added a very pleasant texture to the other ingredients and balanced the hot pepperoncino. The brisket could have been browned more at the beginning of its braise for a more appetizing color, but this is a minor observation on the sweet and tender beef.

I’m going for the Bolognese soon — Crispy Fried Lasagne Bolognese, smoked mozzarella, sweet peppers, red sauce, sharp provolone and fried egg, and the Arista — Roast suckling pig, broccoli rabe, Italian long hots & sharp provolone. All the sandwiches are made on sesame crusted Italian bread.

We never found out what those strange pods we smuggled in 30 years ago were. And there hasn’t been a mob hit around here in almost as many years. So it seems safe to say that you could come down to Food City any time of day or night and eat well. Paesano’s is open seven days a week from 11 to 7 pm. It’s just another kind of hit you don’t have to die for.

JULY 26 AN IMPORTANT BIRTH DATE

Born on July 26, 1944: Mick Jagger, Annson Kenney and Joseph Franklin

© Merilyn Jackson

Photo by: Merilyn Jackson

Annson Kenney at a party six months before his death.

I don’t know where Jagger was born. I only saw Mick once in person, after a concert at the Spectrum. He was pacing up and down the sidewalk at a restaurant across the street from my Front Street house in Queen Village. In typical Philly fashion I threw up my window sash, stuck my head out and yelled “Yo Mick, how ya doin?” Startled, he stopped searched for my voice, gave me a wave and said “Quite all right, thank you.” I responded with something like “Glad to hear” and respecting his privacy, I lowered the window and left him to his to and fro.

I did know the late Annson Kenney and do know the very live and quick Joseph Franklin who were both born in the same Philadelphia hospital on the same day as Jagger. As I recall, the two did not meet until they were in their 20s and burning to make a mark on the city’s arts scene, Annson with his music, performance art, writing and neon works and Joe with his New Music. The two met through a mutual friend in the 70s who later also introduced them to Arthur Sabatini. (I would shortly meet and run off to live with Sabatini and still do.)

A quick friendship formed between the three men. Over the next few years Kenney and Franklin, along with Joseph Showalter, formed Relâche, the Ensemble for Contemporary Music, now known simply as The Relâche Ensemble. At first Sabatini was an ad-hoc advisor; later he wrote much of the copy for the programs and the New Music America Festival in 1987. By that time I was the Relâche publicist.

I’d cook for us all as the guys held meetings, interviewed musicians and planned concert programs. Many nights we sat in the living room overlooking the Delaware River, eating, arguing and laughing in front of that window through which I’d later greet Mick. We called it Café 752.

It was in the late 1970s that Relâche first introduced such contemporary musical giants as Terry Riley, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Gavin Bryars and John Cage, along with a host of other composers, to Philadelphia audiences. Make that, SMALL audiences. Philly wasn’t so hip and smart in those days to take these musics in their stride, let alone with enthusiasm. Save for a small but growing coterie, few so-called music-lovers liked what Relâche was serving.

Meanwhile Kenney had a late night radio program on WHYY called NOIZE, taught at Philadelphia College of Art (now University of the Arts) wrote on a variety of subjects for Philadelphia Magazine, Metropolitan Magazine, Foxylady and The Philadelphia Inquirer. He wrote columns under the pseudonym Blackie Carbon for long defunct alternative paper, The Drummer and a restaurant review column called Oral Gratification for the Daily Planet. He composed music (performed solo and by Relâche) and created astonishing videos and performance art he called stunts. Simultaneously, he was showing his neon art at galleries like Marian Locks, The Painted Bride (where Sabatini and I met after he read his poetry) and his last show, Variations on Three Bauhaus Bends at The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.

“Eternity is a long, long gig.” Annson installing a show at the Art Alliance

On New Year’s Eve Eve, 1981, Annson and Buster Thompson, a racing car mechanic from the UK (working on Roger Daltry’s cars for one) began bar-hopping. Sabatini and another friend, David Erlich, had planned to meet up with them at one of the places they usually hung out back then: Lickety Split, Sassafras, Purgatory, The East Side Club. But everywhere they went they were told Annson and Buster had just left. Someone had stolen Annson’s custom racing jacket off his barstool at Lickety and they were searching for it, partying the night away as a matter of course. Well after the after hours clubs closed and not wanting to troll the after after hours joints, Arthur and David gave up their chase.

About 1 p.m. the next day, the phone rang. Arthur answered, talked for a few minutes and came up to our attic office white-faced – and not just from his hangover. I stared at him from behind my desk and said “Annson?” He nodded. I said “Dead?” He nodded again, this time nearly crumpling. I said “Gun?” He shook his head no. I said “Car?” He said “Yes.”

Later, we learned that about 5:30 that morning, according to Buster, the tires on his Ford Fiesta got stuck on trolley tracks up in Germantown where they had just dropped off a couple of guys. The trolley stopped in front of them and Buster says he could not brake in time. The Fiesta’s hood smashed under the trolley’s “cow catcher.” Annson was not wearing a seatbelt and the dashboard crushed his chest. He did not die instantly. He was still alive while the firemen used the jaws of life to free him. It took an hour. He was pronounced dead at the hospital. Only 37 years old with what he had started ending in the middle.

That night, Arthur and I were having our usual New Year’s Eve party, where Annson had been expected. I had already prepared a lot of food and bought two Peking ducks from around the corner. Within hours we had called a number of people to let them know and invite them to what was then a wake. Annson’s Irish mother, Ann, and his sister Charlene came. We had ordered two more ducks and more than 40 people (some strangers who had just heard) came laden with food and drink. We asked for donations for the funeral and one jerk asked if it was a rent party.

Nicholas Boonin, a close friend and the one person Annson entrusted to install his gallery shows, was there. Joanne Hoffman steamed us a salmon which I swear was salted in tears. Julius Scissor (Frankie Pinto) talked about Annson dancing The Worm and when Annson’s mother asked what that was, Julius got down on the floor and shimmied.

At midnight the fireworks went off at the Benjamin Franklin Bridge and some went outside to watch while the rest crowded around our three windows. When they were over, Nicholas threw his glass out on the pavement, cursing. Joanne chided him. She knew I had just bought 10 new champagne flutes for the celebration. But I said “It’s only a fucking glass,” and threw mine out the window as well. Nicholas looked at me in quizzical amusement.

In the morning, as I washed the glasses, I found I still had nine, not eight of those good Rumanian-made flutes. I called Nicholas. “No,” he said. “I didn’t throw a glass. I threw the champagne bottle. But when you threw yours, I thought it was the most gracious gesture of commiseration and hostessing, so I didn’t say anything.”

I ran to the window, the very same I had yelled out to Mick Jagger, threw it open and looked out. Sure, there were the remains of green glass scattered and my glass about he pavement.

This year is the 32nd anniversary of Annson’s death. To the asshole who stole Annson’s jacket, you will never be forgiven for setting off this terrible trail of events.

Annson was brilliant and funny and aggressive. And thoroughly Philly. He titled one of his neon exhibitions, Loose Language. “As an artist I am ethically sworn to make the move which spawns the memory.” That he did.

Happy Birthday and rest in peace, Annson. Happy Birthday and many more years to come, Joseph. And Yo, same to you too, Mick.

For photos of the 54 piece retrospective neon exhibit of Kenney’s work that took place at Moore College of Art in Philadelphia from October 21-November 13,1983, see the link to Nicholas Boonin’s website in the links column.

A Catalogue with biographical material, photographs (many by Joseph Czarnecki) and writings by Annson Kenney available upon request (limited supply in stock).

Price:  $ 25.00 includes shipping.

Hello Dancers & dance PR peeps,

Once again it’s time to troll for dance events for the Inquirer’s annual FALL GUIDE. We are looking for the following:

Dance Concerts that take place between September 20 & December 31, 2010 mainly in Philadelphia, but will consider including interesting stuff in the Tri-County area.

That means: NO dance that takes place during the LA/Fringe festival — that will already have been covered — though you may and should send me your LA/Fringe events separately.

We need to have the what, who, when, where by August 12. Anything that comes in after will not have much chance of being included unless it’s DYNOMITE and blows up my screen and jumps out and grabs me by the throat and screams “COVER ME this is a once in a lifetime event.”

We will not include workshops, works in progress, lec/dems and the like, but only concerts open to the public.

I have included everyone I have in my address book and am sorry if I have missed anyone. If I have, please let me know and send me your contact info to [email protected]. Also please share this with the rest of the community. We hate leaving out something great because we didn’t hear about it in time. I am asking Steve to kindly post this on the PhillyDance website as well. Can’t wait to hear whatch’all got up your sleevees this year…

Merilyn Jackson

Posted on Fri, Jul. 23, 2010

By Merilyn Jackson

For The Inquirer

Scene from ‘Journey of the Day’ by Matthew Prescott Dancers (L to R):Kevin Yee-Chan, Laura Feig, Colby Damon, Tobin Del Cuore, Anitra Keegan, Tara Keating and Jennifer Goodman. BalletX

No matter how great the choreography, without the right dancers to breathe life into it, a dance can go flat as a souffle when the oven door is opened too soon.

No worries at the Wilma Theater Wednesday night when BalletX opened its summer run. All 10 of the company’s current lineup whipped themselves to great heights and sustained excellence.

BalletX at the Wilma Theater through Sunday, July 25th, 2010

See www.balletx.org for ticket info

or call Box Office: (215) 893-9456

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