pleasure and faith
by Douglas Messerli
Lula Washington Dance Theatre / the performance I saw was with Lita Barrie at The Wallis Annenberg
Center for the Performing Arts, Bram Goldsmith Theater on January 30, 2020
As I recently wrote in another review, Los
Angeles has suddenly been blessed by a plethora of dance performances in the
manner of our long-time wealth of art exhibits, theater presentations (we do
not have a Broadway here, but we do have dozens and dozens of smaller venues
that might make New York independent theater envious), and, the always
plentiful presentations of great music throughout the city. The Wallis
Annenberg Center for Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, Redcat (the Roy and Edna
Disney/CalArts Theater in the lower level of the grand Walt Disney Center), the
Broad Theatre in Santa Monica, the downtown Amundsen Theater, the UCLA series,
and numerous other venues have suddenly perceived, thank heaven, that Angelenos
also have a desire to experience dance in all its various manifestations.
This primarily black company, moreover, does not itself lack diversity
in its company, which in the performance I saw the other night, includes
Joniece Boykins, Quron Clarks, Tehran Dix, Danny Guerrera, Ongelle Johnson,
Kozue Kasahara, Martez McKinzy, Haniyyah Tahirah, Michael Tomlin, III, and Jack
Virga-Hall—which to these tired old eyes seemed to represent also Hispanic and
Asian dancers.
The diversity of the company is a perfect fit with Washington’s own
choreographic achievements.
First of all, the dances of this program—“Hands Up: A Testimony”
(choreographed by Tommie Waheed Evans), “King” (by Washington), “To Lula with
Love/Warrior” (by former company dancer Christopher Huggins), “Zayo” (by Esie
Mensah), “Fragments” (by Washington), and “Reign” (by Rennie Harris)—suggest
Washington’s ability to incorporate a wide range of choreographic partners,
which strengthens her vision. Two of the “world premiere” performances—“Hands
Up: A Testimony” and “To Lula with Love/Warrior”—are the most exciting works of
this event, although Washington’s “King” is a dance one desires to see over and
over again.
Like many a youthful company, Washington’s dancers grandly leap into air
to return nearly effortlessly to ground, rolling across the stage floor only to
stand and express their energy yet again. This is a company of true dance
pleasure, a joy to behold, and in accordance which Lula herself attempts to
engage the audience, getting them to stand at their seats, clap in rhythm, and
basically enter into the process of simple movement. It is almost as if she
were turning her
But there is something entirely different here from most other dance
companies. Dancers, even some of the most contemporary, generally express their
art as a series of group simulations of congruities. Yes, there are always
alterations to the more patterned dancing, the grand jetés of male and female
performers, the constant shifts of patterning and deconstruction. Yet
Washington’s company seem almost to represent a paring of mismatches, women of
height and wide girth, with thinner males, taller males poised against
delicately dainty females.
And because of this, most of Washington’s dancers work in what I might
describe (and my theater-going partner, Lita Barrie, described) as a kind of
syncopation. At moments it appears that each dancer is performing slightly to a
different beat from the others, which creates another kind of energy based on
the individual instead of the corps de ballet. In Washington’s works,
bodies themselves are diverse, and they move differently from one another.
There is a kind of honesty here, a revelation of the difference as
opposed to the similarity of most dance companies. It is almost as if she has
invited a group of remarkable dancers onto her stage to figure it out for
themselves.
Yet, the last piece, “Reign” seemed to redeem it all, as the dancers attend a wild Saturday night evening before returning to church the next morning to express those same emotions in a completely new manner. Pleasure and faith for most of us do not always make a perfect fit; but for this community, which Harris created for Lula Washington’s 30th anniversary in 2010, we suddenly perceive that the two are the very same thing. The expression of the body is both pleasure and faith, and we cannot help but believe that one is totally necessary for the other.
Los Angeles, February 2, 2020
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and
Performance (February 2020).
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