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Oakland Ballet seems to be getting right to the pointe these days.
With new office and rehearsal space in Oakland and an upcoming first-ever performance at
Yerba Buena Center in San Francisco, the 37-year-old troupe is flying high. The opening
program this weekend at the Paramount in Oakland even featured a rarity, a Balanchine
ballet in honor of the great Russian dance masters centennial year. This is an honor
not often accorded to dance companies by those who dole out Mr. Bs choreographic
legacy. Unfortunately it was the least successfully realized offering on the bill.
Glinka Pas de Trois is not exactly Balanchines
masterpiece to begin with--a little white ballet, of the kind used to open the bill in
more traditional times. Marina Eglevsky, daughter of the great Andre Eglevsky, who with
Melissa Hayden and Allegra Kent, premiered the work in 1955, staged it for Oakland. To say
that guest artist Maximo Califano is no Andre Eglevsky is an understatement. Not quite up
to the demands of the choreography, he was stiff and awkward and didnt manage much
elevation until his final variation. The women, Jenna Johnson and Erin Yarborough, were
blonde and lovely in the Balanchine mold and held up their end as best as they could under
the circumstances.
But there was much more good news than bad. The company shines in
contemporary works, many created on them. Such was Michael Lowes Double
Happiness, a charming Asian reverie that conferred the happiness of its title on
those who watched. With a lively score by Melody of China, it began with a flirtatious pas
de deux for Chih-Ting Shih and Gabriel Williams as "Gold Rush Folk." Amid much
business with fans and Western hats --kitschy but cute--this segment gave way to a pas de
quatre for horses with Yarborough and Ethan White as palominos and Joseph Copley and
Carlos Venturo as two intensely athletic dark horses. The corps enters and does a dance of
"Splashing Fish" and the piece ends with a wedding banquet, the whole company
celebrating as the horse and Gold Rush couples, now clad in red nuptial robes, tie the
knot. Lowe, an Oakland native who claims to have received his inspiration from childhood
visits to Chinatown, can be proud of what his local company did with this world premiere.
The highlight of the evening, choreographically and emotionally, was
Francesca Harpers Dark Light. Done as a response to 9/11 and premiered in
Oakland a month after that event, it originally was a solo dance. Reworked and presented
two years later to mark the anniversary, it has been expanded to a dance for seven. The
dancers begin by walking onstage and talking, sometimes overlapping each other, about war
and fear and security. Then they begin to dance to Rolf Ellmers jazzy score.
Harpers dance vocabulary is original and quirky, always interesting to watch. The
dance movements eventually begin to suggest fear and flight and then, as all the dancers
fall down in a line, one undoes her long hair and begins to mourn in witness to tragedy as
the word "HUMAN" is projected on a screen at the rear. Powerful stuff.
The final offering was a real crowd-pleaser, Robert Garlands Joplin
Dances, first premiered at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in 1995. With pianists David
Thomas Roberts and Frank French manning the keyboards of an enormous double piano, the
company cakewalked and cavorted to irrepressible ragtime tunes. Kate M. Leiberth and
Williams delivered "Jumpin De Broom" a marriage ritual, while Phaedra
Jarret and Jakee Malik Johnson proved you cant judge a book by its cover in the
flirtatious "Book Dance." From there, the ensemble took over, with leggy Ilana
Goldman a standout in "Ragtime Nightingale" and the closing "Maple Leaf
Rag."
September 13,
2003
- Suzanne Weiss