ritualizing the rite
by Douglas Messerli
Valery Gergiev (director), with the
cast of the Marinsky Theatre Stravinsky
and the Ballets Russes: The Firebird, The Rite of Spring, and The Wedding.
Yvonne Rainer (choreographer, after
Millicent Hodson), with Pat Catterson, Emily Coates, Patricia Hoffbauer, and
Sally Silvers RoS Indexical and Spiraling Down / RedCat (Roy and Edna
Disney/ CalArts Theater, at the Disney Music Center, Los Angeles / the
performance I attended was the Los Angeles premiere, Thursday, June 25, 2009
Of particular importance for me, however, was seeing The Rite of Spring just previous to
Rainer's homage, dissection, and spoof of that great work. The day after seeing
the Rainer piece, moreover, I watched the tape of the first reconstruction of
Nijinsky's original, performed in 1987 by the Joffrey Ballet in Los Angeles.
From a corps de ballet of
several dozens of dancers, Rainer slimmed down her company to four dancers,
Emily Coates, Patricia Hoffbauer, Sally Silvers, and Pat Catterson, the last of
whom was replaced in the production I saw by Rainer herself, now age 75.
The tone of Rainer's version was established almost immediately by the
four sitting around a card table, listening to something on head phones. They
begin by humming and thrumming the overture to The Rite of Spring, droned so out of tune it is barely
recognizable.
As the First Act, L'adoration
de la Terre, begins, three of the women (in the
original, many of the group dances were split by Nijinsky into groups of three)
gather, as the old men do in Nijinsky's version, to celebrate the spring with
the heavy stamp of their booted feet. Here, in spritely colored work-out
clothing, the woman start by imitating but quickly move to other positions as,
sometimes working in unison, but more often splitting apart into ones or twos,
they reiterate some of the hand, arm, and head-gestures of the Nijinsky
choreography. To her "indexing" of the original, Rainer adds often
hilarious and touching riffs from Groucho Marx's daffy backward shuffles
(remember his incredible dancing in the movies?) and Robin Williams (presumably
from his Bob Fosse imitations in The
Birdcage) to Sarah Bernhardt's melodramatic gestures. Every so often, the
exhausted dancers—they are, after all, performing all the various chorus
numbers—retire to a couch, where they temporarily rest, change from shoes to
Kleenex boxes (suggesting, I gather, the various different tribal outfits of
the original dancers) and appear to be deciding what to do with the dreadful
audience response.
For Rainer has layered her performance to include the riots of the
original. Early in their dances, various placards fall from the ceiling
dangling like posters in the sky, announcing possible responses to the work.
From the soundtrack of the BBC rendition, Riot
at the Rite, we hear various shouts and hateful remarks, Nijinsky counting
loudly to his performers so that they, unable any longer to hear the music,
might continue the dance. At one point a mob of planted actors, a couple in the
costumes of the original designer Nicholas Roerich, rush to the stage,
demanding the company return to TriBeCa, where Rainer's New York home is
located.
The unflappable dancers, however, ultimately maintain their demeanors,
bending down occasionally to return, in mime, some of the missiles presumably
hurled their way. As the performers began the memorable "Dance of the
Virgins," those terrifying figures who ultimately decide which of their
member is to be sacrificed, Sally Silvers falls to the floor in a faint,
referencing the original fall of the young woman selected to die. Throughout, Silvers humorously huffs and
puffs her way through these dances, sometimes in Marx brothers style, leaving
everything out that the others do except for the final position (the other two
dancers are younger by at least two decades), lending her highly satiric
dancing style (Silvers, like the others with whom she dances, is also a noted
choreographer) to the whole. Not to be outdone, however, the other two later
fall, and in lieu of the final end of the sacrificial victim—raised in her
death above the heads of the original male chorus—each of Rainer's women take
turns at demonstrating their dramatic skills in dying by falling upon the
couch, Silvers most riotously clumsy, with Rainer almost unable, it appears, to
climb over its arms.
Yet, throughout this exhausting dance, these four women stomp, march,
float through the air, twist, turn, and gesture with arms, hands, and fingers
along with Stravinsky's raw, barbarously rhythmic, and often blaringly atonal
chords, with an incredible energy and beauty that might almost be said to have
outdo any large corps de ballets.
Rainer declared at the beginning of the work that her performance might be seen
as "geriatric," but if her graceful movements represent the
consequences of old age, bring it on! We should all be so beautifully
lithe.
Los Angeles, June 27, 2009
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (June 2009).
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