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The Dance Theatre of Harlem: Exercise in Historical Irony
| Article
# : |
14962 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1988 |
1,768 Words |
| Author
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Peter Lawrence Peter Lawrence writes for a number of national publications
and is based in New York City. |
When the corps de ballet of the Dance Theatre of Harlem dances its way through George Balanchine's Serenade, a new aesthetic immediately imposes itself upon the ballet. The dark bodies of the Harlem ballerinas against the powder-blue tunics and tulle of Karinska's costumes make us look at the work in a new way. For example, the S-shapes on the lower backs of the ballerinas make for a different line than white ballerinas can naturally manage.
When Arthur Mitchell, a former principal dancer with Balanchine's company, New York City Ballet, founded the Dance Theatre of Harlem in 1969, he knew intuitively that Balanchine's radicalization of ballet--for example, that the human body itself had language of its own, beyond narrative-- had opened doors for the creation of a black ballet company.
Serendade, one of Balanchine's earliest works (from 1934), was among the first to combine modernism with the plush, expressive quality of the old Russian white ballets, which were created for the enjoyment of the aristocracy. The music itself--Tchaikovsky's Serenade for Strings, with its overblown yet undeniably effective romantic cadences--seems to emanate from a patrician source.
Visual Irony
To watch the Harlem troupe dance Serenade, as they did during their short season this past summer as part of the First International Festival of the Arts, was an exercise in historical, as well as visual, irony. The least aristocratic of America's people (in fact many of them descended from former slaves) go through the paces once reserved--on both sides of the
... (1989 of 10487 Characters)
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