PREVIEW: Martha Graham Dance Company

Martha Graham Dance Company

This Friday and Saturday, the Power Center welcomes The Martha Graham Dance company. Martha Graham (1894-1991) is considered the mother of modern dance and her company is one of the oldest and most celebrated in the country. Her experimental movement methods have become the parent of a number of powerful 20th century names in the dance world. Her choreography is replete with infectious human emotion: sorrow, longing, joy, perseverance, and a reverence for the mythical.  Her company’s performance  at the Power Center will be moving and well worth the ticket!

The Friday and Saturday night shows differ in each program structure. The first evening will feature several short pieces while the second features two long pieces, all choreographed by Martha Graham. In addition to the show at the Power Center, there are several events that capitalize on the company’s presence in Ann Arbor. At 7:30 pm on Wednesday January 23rd, the YMCA will host a  Graham technique training session. No dance experience necessary! No Y membership necessary either. Just come ready to move and learn a thing or two about the technique. Also, on Friday at 4 pm, Dance Department  professors Peter Sparling and Clare Croft will hold panel discussion about Martha Graham profound impact on human expression. The talk will take place in Room 100 of the Hatcher Library.

For more information about the company, click here. For ticket info, go to ums.org or the box office at the League. See ya there!

REVIEW: Francis Alÿs at the UMMA

Francis Alÿs at the UMMA

Francis Alÿs is a Belgian born artist who lives and works in Mexico City. WIth a background in architecture and engineering, his transition to visual art is surprising. Never the less, he has become well versed in video, photography, performance art, writing, painting and animation. His work generally carries strong social-political undertones, particularly with regards to activity in Latin American countries. His work is a sort of recorded moving meditation, a stroll through an urban landscape, paying particular attention to rhythm, geometric, or repetitive patterns. He “examines the tension between politics and poetics.”

Alÿs’ 2005 video installation, “Guards,” is currently on display at the UMMA. The exhibit opened on December 15th and will run through March 31st. The signature of the British guards is as a very emotionally sparse, collective, non-individualistic, rule abiding group. They never for a second break character as they pound through the streets like the beat of a drum. Against the mute background of London’s city-scape, the guards leap out like bright berries, though somehow seem less inviting than a piece of wild fruit. The symbol of a guard is very metaphoric for so many aspects of the human condition: protection, defensiveness, indifference, importance, worth, value, unity, patriotism, or even violence. These abstract theories blossom as the guards move repetitively through the bare London streets in the moving pictures. It’s very interesting to see, I recommend taking a holiday outing to the UMMA!

For more on Francis Alÿs, check out his page of the UMMA’s website and watch other videos of his on his website.

Review: University of Michigan Concert Band

The Michigan Concert Band closed its Fall 2012 season with a music trip to Greece. Featuring pieces by famous composers like Shostakovich, and not so famous composers like Roger Zare– alumnus of the University– the band successfully delivered a geographical and emotional journey.

The concert opened with a rousing rendition of Makris’s Aegean Festival. Opening with virtuosic woodwind runs, the group quickly captured the attention of the audience. Prominently featured throughout this piece was the woodwind family. Beautiful solos went from the clarinets, to the piccolos, to the flutes. The middle of the piece slowed down. A new theme was intoduced with far more melodic lines. A cadenza played by the first clarinet opened up this slower section. The cadenza, beautifully played, demonstrated the range and beauty of the clarinet, and the technical and musical ability of students in the School of Music, Theater, and Dance.

The second piece to follow was a wind band adaptation of Roger Zare’s Mare Tranquilitatis. Zare, an alumnus of the School of Music’s composition department, originally composed this lyrical and mysterious beauty for orchestra. The wind band version proved beautiful and the band expressed just as much sensitivity as a group of stringed instruments. The concert then featured Derek Shapiro, graduate conductor, on Tull’s Sketches on a Tsudor Psalm.

PREVIEW: Detroit Cody High School and Detroit International Academy Theater and Creative Writing Performance

Detroit Cody High School and Detroit International Academy Theater and Creative Writing Performance

Students of English 310 invite you to join us!

Looking for an awesome way to start off your holiday break?  Come to the Walgreen Drama Center- Studio One (North Campus) on Wednesday, December 19 at 9:30 AM.  There will be two amazing and inspiring performances.

The students of Detroit’s Cody High School will grace the stage with their creative writing and the girls of Detroit International Academy for young women will debut their original play “The Poisonous Pizza”. We have been working with both groups of students for the entire semester and now we are ready to showcase our accomplishments together.

Please support these students and help us to congratulate them for all of their hard work and dedication.

Admission is free, hope to see you there!

REVIEW: Friars’ Annual Fall Study Break Concert

 

This past Thursday December 8th, I went to see the Friars’ Annual Fall Study Break Concert, and it was simply amazing!!  It was held in Rackham Auditorium, and there was a great turn out.  Outrage Dance Team was their opening act, who despite some minor technical difficulties, performed a modern upbeat dance number that got the crowd in a wide awake and vigilant mood.  After the performance, one of the dancers introduced the Friars onto the stage with the classic line, “And now due to unfortunate circumstances, I introduce to you the Friars…”  

 

I must say, I absolutely love how spontaneous and energetic the Friars are.  Each one of them is a natural in the spotlight and effortlessly entertaining, though some more than others.  It seemed as if their entire performance, other than their songs of course, was unrehearsed and a result of their quick wit and go with the flow attitude.  They also have a fantastic ability to draw inspiration from their audience as inspiration and take feedback from the audience and turn it into a joke.  I saw the first glimpse of their impeccable sense of humor when I opened up the concert program, and it was filled with baby pictures and expressions (the theme of the night was The Friars as Babies).   

 

Some highlights: The Friars turned the song Mrs. Robinson into a clever anthem praising Denard Robinson and singing in perfect harmony and unity.  One of their classic lines:  “Here’s to you Denard Robinson, Wolverines fans turn their eyes to you, Go Go Blue.”   One of my other favorites was when they sang God Bless the U of M, a beautiful and soft tribute to the university, while also taking several stabs at Ohio State and Notre Dame. (Some lyrics include, “And I’m proud to go to Michigan, where we hate the Ohio State, let them think they’re cool for now, til they realize our jobs pay” and then “And I’m proud to go to Michigan where we hate the white and green, and I won’t forget my ACT scores that gave that right to me” both of which had the crowd laughing hysterically.)  

 

However, my most memorable moment of the night had to be when Midnight Blue, the university’s Women’s Glee Club, joined the Friars on stage and sang Some Nights by Fun.  I love this song, for its upbeat and energetic nature, but it felt like the two choral ensembles brought the song to life.  The sweet sound filled the auditorium and invigorated the crowd, leaving us feeling impassioned and inspired and alive.

REVIEW: Minimalist Magic: A Midsummer Night’s Dream at the Power Center

Malcolm Tulip’s new production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream has taken the familiar play out of the woods and into the desert. In seeking to remove the play from its familiar fantasyland trappings while still retaining an air of mysticality and changeability, the director looked to the famous Burning Man festival instead, where people can create magical environs and fabulous new personae for themselves, and then disappear without a trace. The stage was filled not by shady trees and drooping vines but by a vast wooden semicircle, replete with ramps, climbing walls and trapdoors, and a very tall pole in the middle of the stage. This set, designed by Vincent Mountain, did not convey mystery but rather served to infuse the stage action with a sense of wild fun as actors clambered and leaped about—less forest, more jungle gym. Changes in lighting conveyed changes in scene and setting with almost subliminal deftness—kudos to lighting designer Rob Murphy. I personally have never been to Burning Man, so I cannot say how closely the proceedings on-stage resembled the actual event, but the emphasis in this production is really less on the setting and more on the individual characters.

The fairies in this show are very different from the usual cute, mischievous pixies we are accustomed to seeing in Midsummer. These fairies are, essentially, a very Burning-Man-esque combination of earthiness and weirdness. The servant fairies (Mustardseed, Peaseblossom, et al.), clad in simple black ensembles of jeans and sleeveless shirts, look for all the world like theatre techies; they make magic happen, but they’re very no-nonsense and workmanlike about it. The main fairies, Oberon, Titania, and Puck, are a somewhat stranger breed; the best way to describe their visual appearance would be if a trio of punk rockers decided to play dress-up with a combination of their parent’s clothes and Christmas-tree lights. Caitlin Chou as Oberon projected that character’s imperious majesty, using an Indiana-Jones-grade bullwhip as a symbol of power like Prospero and his staff, while Tyler Dean played Titania with an almost campy sense of regality and dignity. Oh, forgot to mention—the gender roles for many of the major characters have been switched around. This device, obvious yet imperceptible at the same time, is never confusing, highlighting the play’s themes of alterable identity. Indeed, the act of making some roles both male and female serves to emphasize the universality of these beloved characters.

The most startling characterization comes in the form of Robin Goodfellow, a.k.a. Puck: played by Derek Tran, Oberon’s right-hand sprite becomes a borderline malicious character, taking a frightening kind of delight in messing with mortals and fairies alike, not much caring what effect his actions have. Such a conceptualization is not entirely new; the fairy fun in Midsummer has always seemed rather random and bizarre, powerful creatures with ethics highly alien to human rules doing as they please with little regard to who gets caught in the crossfire. It’s just that they’ve never seemed so dangerous before. The strange otherness of these beings is underlined by the creepy sound designs of Conor Barry and Simon Alexander-Adams.

The impulsiveness of the young lovers came through with wonderful clarity in this production. Hermia and Lysander’s flight into the woods to elope, Helena’s crazy lovesick pursuit of Demetrius, and all the other painful and hilarious difficulties these characters endure resonated with the immediacy of youth. Even the magical complications that ensue once both of the men are bewitched to fall in love with Helena seemed to be less the result of fairy potions and more simple teenage caprice. Hermia and Lysander, played by Kevin Collins and Jacqueline Toboni respectively, were perfect at portraying the characters as the rebellious teenagers they are, fleeing the oppressive rules of King Theseus and Hermia’s father Egeus (the king and the father were played as stodgy sleazeballs by Drew Ariana and Emily Hanley, respectively, while Ariel Sobel gave an understatedly funny performance as a dazedly apathetic trophy-wife Queen Hippolyta). Jon Manganello’s Demetrius seemed a much more well-to-do lad than Lysander, smartly dressed, charismatic, and determined in his pursuit of Hermia, while Quinn Scillian gave a hilarious performance of Helena as a severely neurotic girl next door. Much credit must also go to Christianne Myers’ costume designs for helping to outline these characterizations before the characters even speak a word.

Madeline Sharton, Allison Brown, William Filkowski, Elizabeth Raynes, Danielle Cohn and Joseph Dunn are endearingly goony as the lowlife actors, the Rude Mechanicals. The Mechanicals in this production came off less like vainly oblivious wannabe-thespians and more like simple working folk who don’t really know what they’re doing, but want to make a good job of it anyways. Brown in particular made the absolute most of the role of Bottom—arguably Shakespeare’s most virtuosic comic creation—combining slaphappy brashness in the character’s “human” scenes, Looney-Tune wackiness in the sequence where the character is transformed into an ass, and unashamed outrageousness in the final performance-within-a-performance, which must be seen to be believed.

Although the unconventional set and hodgepodge of costumes can seem confusing at first, it quickly becomes apparent that this is an interpretation highly faithful to the spirit of this strange and wonderful work. Very soon, the thrill of watching such brilliant scenes, so rich in poetic truth and comic delight, being performed by such intelligent and insightful actors, becomes palpable. This is quite simply one of the strongest ensemble performances I have ever seen on the stage of the Power Center. Without a doubt, a must-see.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream is playing at the Power Center December 8 at 8 P.M. and December 9 at 2 P.M.