Watching the Company Rehearse

One of the coolest things about this program was being able to sit in on rehearsals. To wittness the process of putting a show together, is an opportunity that doesn’t happen very often. To be able to see the Martha Graham Company’s Clytemnestra come together piece by piece has been really educational and inspiring. Especially since we learned pieces from the name-calling and watched the older version of the piece, we had a greater understanding and deeper connection to the work. Watching the open rehearsal for the prologue to Clytemnestra was amazing. At the end I wish I could have seen more!

From watching some of the rehearsals for Clytemnestra, I was able to see bits and pieces of the work in progress, and so it was really interesting to see all the pieces come together at the open rehearsal. I really hope I am able to see Clytemnestra when the company comes to NYC next year, I am really looking forward to seeing how the whole work comes together. To have the opportunity to see the inner workings of a company has been an amazing experience and really was one of the best parts of the program.

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LIVE STREAM : Skidmore Student Showing @ 7:30pm

Dress RehearsalsTonight, at 7:30pm, we will be streaming all student composition work, as well as a LIVE rendition of Panorama, and a few special surprises.

You can watch the video below, or follow the link here.

 

 

Check back at 7:30pm for this very exciting event!

While you’re waiting, you can check out some of our other videos.

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Elektra Interview with Blakeley White-Mcguire

This is an interview with Blakeley White-Mcguire, a principal dancer with the Martha Graham Dance Company. This interview was conducted by the students learning the part of Elektra from Blakeley at Skidmore College’s Summer Dance Intensive.

You can find a link to the video here

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Life after SPAC

Panorama Costumes
Panorama Costumes hang in SPAC
This is the final week of the Martha Graham Summer workshop and the overall feeling among students is one of mixed emotions; yes, we miss home… but we don’t want to leave! One of the main events that has helped to wind down this workshop is the performance at SPAC (Saratoga Performing Arts Center). After 11 days of shin splints, sore muscles, and an increased amount of protein in our diets, we were lucky enough to perform Panorama on the same stage that the Graham company dancers danced.

But now what? The dancing sure hasn’t stopped, but there is a more relaxed feeling among the dancers, even though we will perform Panorama two more times in our final Student Showing. In conversation, Linda Huang explained to me that our SPAC performance “broke the ice”. Julie Weiss furthered Linda’s thought, noting that we’ll be dancing for a smaller more intimate audience, consisting of mostly family and friends, which puts less pressure on us dancers. 

This week we’ll be focusing on soaking up as much technique and tips from Graham technique classes, while also hurrying to finish up our media and Clytemnestra influenced pieces for the final showing. 

Upon speaking with many students about their Panorama experience, I realized that each dancer has their own personal ideals for and unique connection with the piece. For that reason, I’m inviting my fellow Panoramians to participate and share some of their feelings about Life after SPAC. 

 

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Tonight: 7:30pm - Open Rehearsals, LIVE Streaming

This Tuesday, we will be streaming LIVE during our Open Rehearsals at Skidmore College. For those who cannot make it to Skidmore in Saratoga Spring, check back at 7:30pm for a live feed of our rehearsals.

Starting at 7:30pm, you’ll be able to watch the video Live on this website, or here

Clytemnestra Prologue 4
Clytemnestra Prologue

While you’re waiting for the stream to start, you can watch some of our other videos here.

UPDATE : The performances were fantastic, and we had a full house in the theater! We had a few audio issues, but resolved them for upcoming live streaming events. Thanks to all who came + watched!

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Son of “Clytemnestra”: Return to the House of Martha - Week 2

 

Peter Sparling
Peter Sparling in rehearsals
The following entries are from a journal kept by former Graham dancer, Peter Sparling, while teaching and coaching for the Clytemnestra Project at Skidmore College. Sparling is presently Thurnau Professor of Dance at University of Michigan; he performed with the Graham Company from 1973-87 and was artistic director of the Graham Centenary Festival in 1994, hosted by U-M and University Musical Society. His last company performance was in “Appalachian Spring” at The Library of Congress in 1998. He has set Graham works on companies all over the world.

 

Week 2:

June 11: The dancers have settled in, and the rhythm of classes and rehearsals has been established. Three weeks is a good timeline for such an endeavor—with the second Wednesday a clear mid-point and goals scaled to fit the accumulated momentum towards the final events scheduled for the end of the third week. A company performance—including Panorama danced by all 34 students—finishes off the second week, leaving the last week for rehearsals of company repertory for upcoming tours to American Dance Festival and Berlin. The new production of Clytemnestra looks further ahead to performances in Greece in late October and The Kennedy Center in December. I’m determined to find a way of being in the audience for either Athens or D.C. –or both! Frequent flyer miles? 

 

Jenn in Prelude and Revolt
Jennifer DePalo in Prelude and Revolt
Last night’s open studio rehearsal of Friday’s program highlighting Martha’s early origins and entitled Prelude and Revolt, cast a look back to the beginnings of her high theatricality and bold, new choreographic signature. A pastiche of works curated by Janet Eilber demonstrated the sculpted exoticism deriving from Denishawn and morphing into the stripped-down, angular modernism of Lamentation and Chronicle. One senses the revelation brought about when Martha transposed her own, redesigned force field onto a mass of eager, fearless bodies. Momentum, percussive group impulses and a surging, rallying energy expressed in waves of repeated motifs rock the entire dancing ground. It is both exhilarating and visually engaging, merging kinesthetic directional thrust with the organic patterns of swarms, armies, and uprisings. This is early complex systems theory before it was a theory: behaviors of emboldened individuals and groups in crisis embodied and mapped out into the space like a satellite view of an approaching storm front.  

 

The Women of Martha Graham Dance Company
Open Rehearsals at Skidmore
The women in Chronicle deserve particular praise for the immense concentration and commitment to their communal effort. How this work was recovered from its own sunken Atlantis of Martha’s lost dances I do not know. I can only marvel at the archeological wonder of it—as if its reconstruction from fragments was achieved by retrograding back in time from her last works to an essential formula of style, shape and force. And to recover vicariously that divine exhaustion of Graham dancers after multiple implosions against the abdominal wall—where the pelvis curls under and lifts like a bowl to hold the taut sinew stretched across its mouth like a drum—is a gift and a reward for my many years of allegiance to her cause. 

 

My exhaustion tonight is not like that of the company members or students; theirs comes from grueling repetition of demanding physical feats. I look on, summoning the descriptive powers to enliven and enlighten issues of style, intention, and timing. Occasionally, I will recall words from Martha or original cast members spoken in rehearsal. I suppose my attendance at run-throughs serves as a kind of catalyzing agent for the dancers’ efforts and focus, since they imagine me as closer to those precious sources and thus able to direct them towards more fully realized embodiments of their roles. As I attend to the works I’ve been assigned to direct during this short visit, I begin to keep a mental account of the essentials necessary to shape and sustain them.

Some day, I’ll write my own “A Dancer’s Guide to Graham Repertory”, including notes on Embattled Garden, Clytemnestra, Diversion of Angels, Errand Into the Maze, Cave of the Heart, Night Journey, El Penitente, Acts of Light, and many more. Contributions from the many different generations and casts would allow for certain constants to assert themselves while also revealing the range of interpretations. 

 

June 12:

Thoughts on the art and craft of a Graham performer: 

Watching Martha “mark” the title role in the black-and-white early 60’s rehearsal film of Clytemnestra, (involving halting indications of stumbling and staggering, leg lifts and falls to floor, but all the while exhibiting an indomitable force at the center of her nightmarish vision), I am struck by the instinct and intelligence in her solo presence that go beyond intellectual plotting of character or choreographic ingenuity. I’m reminded of something Darrell Wilkins mentions in a recent article in Ballet Review about Lincoln Kirstein concerning Martha’s “synthesis of diverse sources in a new dance language”, “…culled from the motley sources of her private readings and life experience. It was nonetheless rich for all that (and nonetheless indebted to outside sources), but it was, by nature, a potpourri, not pure, singular, and consanguineous essence.” He identifies “her tremendous discipline and restraint that went into (her) technique, and the wealth of traditions (East Indian, Greek, Japanese, American Indian, and otherwise) upon which her work in fact drew.” 

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Tech Rehearsals at SPAC

Tonight, students and company members arrived at the spacious SPAC for our technical rehearsal. Students ran Panorama, while company members did Maple Leaf Rag.

While everyone was performing onstage, I took some video of the company members performing Maple Leaf Rag. You can watch the entire video of Maple Leaf Rag here. The night really flew by - before I knew it, we were back home. I believe the performance captured on video reflects that swift quality.

Feel free to add your own thoughts on tech rehearsals! Looking forward to a great evening of performances!

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Site Redesign in Progress

This past week, I’ve received feedback on the design and layout of our site. The most common complaint? The navigation on the site was a obscure and hidden. In response, I’ve been looking at different layouts and design for the site, and have put together a new style.

I would love to hear feedback on how this new layout compares to the old layout, and what you would like to see developed further.

It would be very helpful to hear your comments during this redesign process.

[ For those receiving this in an email, follow the link to see the new site (in progress). ]

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Son of “Clytemnestra”: Return to the House of Martha

Peter SparlingThe following entries are from a journal kept by former Graham dancer, Peter Sparling, while teaching and coaching for the Clytemnestra Project at Skidmore College. Sparling is presently Thurnau Professor of Dance at University of Michigan; he performed with the Graham Company from 1973-87 and was artistic director of the Graham Centenary Festival in 1994, hosted by U-M and University Musical Society. His last company performance was in “Appalachian Spring” at The Library of Congress in 1998. He has set Graham works on companies all over the world.

Prologue
June 1, 2008:
Skidmore College lies nestled at the north end of an outrageous display of ornate mansions lining Saratoga Springs’ Gold Coast. Majestic and ostentageous, solid yet somehow tasteless in their eccentric juxtapositions, these beached behemoths loom as a surreal reminder of old-style wealth and a pocket of American history that harbored some our country’s earliest dynasties. What dark family dramas and repressed intrigues were played out on their sprawling summer lawns or behind the brick-laced, columned facades?

Skidmore

My mind reeled as I took the slow crawl up Broadway towards the college’s entrance after the 10-hour drive from Ann Arbor, Michigan. I struggled to remain in my bone-weary, restless body… like sitting on the uncomfortably sloped Noguchi throne in Act II of Martha Graham’s “Clytemnestra”, hunched in contraction with palms pressed up into my eye sockets, awaiting Orestes’ cue to awaken from his deranged meditations and confront his violent destiny. Countless dancer’s lifetimes and 30 years later, I was returning to Martha’s house, to the domain of gnashing teeth and exquisite contortions.

I was reclaiming my password to her temple of visceral truth that had permitted me entry into its elite membership 35 years ago. In return, I was to impart the wisdom, perspectives and stories I’d carried with me and nurtured, like Ishmael surviving the Great American Whale, or the grateful kid from the Rustbelt who’d been dubbed worthy by the master and was miraculously still here, ready to give back to a generation of younger disciples.

The welcome later that night was significant. I’d found the apartment that housed the company and staff, and was greeted by my roommate, Jaki Levy, our young and brainy media guru for the workshop. After a long soak in the bathtub, I lay in my dorm-style bed re-wiring my brain circuitry with a volume of Proust. Suddenly the entire apartment complex and surrounding campus were wracked with the echoing crack of explosions. A child of the 50’s, my atom-bomb scenario immediately kicked in– and then I remembered it was Alumni Weekend at Skidmore. Fireworks! The Graham Company dancers in the adjoining unit had already gathered outside and were squealing with delight as the projectiles rocketed from the distant athletic field and cascaded in dazzling blossoms of light over the bank of trees to the south. It was a wonderful way to first meet and greet these young dancers, as we witnessed together this stroboscopic spectacle of a scale we all aspired towards in our own personal repertoires of pyrotechnics and drama. In their witty, fond repartee, they identified each burst of illumination with a particular dancer’s mode of dynamic display, casting their own stage personalities to fit the grand ballet of special effects. My kind of people… and a fitting prologue to the next three weeks in Martha’s House.

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Video Viewing of Clytemnestra

 

Sadira Smith
Rehearsing Clytemnestra

The viewing of Clytemnestra was surprising for me in more ways than one. I have always been told by teachers that the camera can never truly capture the essence of movement or that it has a tendency to diminish the power of movement. This was not the case at all with the PBS performance of Clytemnestra.

Even if the camera did decrease the intensity of the dancing, it does not change the fact that the VHS version remained captivating, that it did maintain the spirit of the choreography, and that it was able to carry the emotions of each character/dancer across the screen to the audience.

The success of the film in its telling of Graham’s Clytemnestra resulted from two main factors—the high caliber of the dancers’ performance and the skillful manipulation of cinematic techniques. The dancers’ honesty and physicality not only in their bodies but in their faces as well made the characters on-screen three-dimensional and alive for the viewers. The brilliance of their performance did not come as a surprise to me; what did come as a surprise was the cinematographer’s ability to render depth in a two-dimensional medium. The sizes, the transitions, and the angles of the shots used were largely responsible for the story-telling.

And yet, despite the camera’s triumph, the film is not perfect. In the uses of the different angles and sizes in the shots, the audience receives details, depth, etc. However, what the viewers do not receive is the bigger picture- literally and possibly figuratively. In the VHS version, we often did not have the panoramic view of the ballet, as we would if the ballet was performed live on a proscenium stage. While we get the little details, such as a little twitch of an eye, we miss the much of the action between the characters. Since there is often more than one character onstage, a constant dialogue exists throughout the ballet, whether it is character-to-character or even character-to-set.

In a narrative where the relationship is so important in propelling the plot, I wonder how much of the whole story we are missing while focusing on the details. During the close-ups of individual characters, we don’t see the progression of the plot in one whole moving tableau but rather in fragments. Furthermore, we see fragments that have been chosen for us. While our eyes can travel wherever they wish to during a live performance, they have their limits with a film. Every shot that plays before a film audience has been pre-selected to evoke particular emotions and to essentially shape our interpretation of the film.

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