Posts Tagged ‘Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival’

The Virtual Pillow

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

“The rabbit-hole went straight on like a tunnel for some way, and then dipped suddenly down, so suddenly that Alice had not a moment to think about stopping herself before she found herself falling down a very deep well.”—Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

That’s how I felt when I began using the Internet.

But I’m no longer so Victorian. Tunneling takes me to places I never intended to go. It’s the new normal. Yet the Internet is a virtual rabbit hole. How to find small Wonderlands, and not just quagmires of unembellished junk, is the real question.

Recently, I made my way up the ladder-like road that leads to the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival in Becket, MA. Besides my work as a festival summer scholar (who gives pre-performance talks and such), I learned about how America’s oldest continuously running dance festival is trying to shape their presence on the net.

In 2008 the Pillow’s effort went into higher gear when the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation gave the festival more than $1M. Unlike most grants, this one doesn’t overly define how their money should be spent. But General Manager Connie Chin says that some of the money is earmarked toward a project called the Virtual Pillow.

So, I checked in with Virtual Pillow Project Manager Lisa Niedermeyer about how the festival, which boasts three stages, is connecting with the broadband world beyond their rural doorstop. “If the Pillow is going to grow, how are we going to do it?” questioned Niedermeyer, a former Pillow performer. “The answer is to do it online. The Virtual Pillow is the fourth stage.”

The goal, however, is not to stream an entire live festival performance. Nor will The Pillow attempt to create an online simulacrum of being at their hallowed grounds where Ted Shawn’s Men Dancers performed during the Depression for local ladies over tea and cakes.

The idea of how to grow is much more inimitable, much more Lewis Carroll.

It begins with PillowTalks, which are curated by Director of Preservation Norton Owen and made accessible on FORA.tv via a media partnership. These talks feature choreographers, visual artists, and writers whose work connects directly or tangentially to performances at The Pillow. So far there are only eight edited PillowTalk videos. All are under ten minutes. My favorite FORA.tv/Pillow film features choreographer Barak Marshall describing the experience of dancing for an anti-Israeli crowd:

Barak Marshall: Dance Bridging Cultures

Clearly The Pillow isn’t spending their money fast or creating flash mobs scenarios. They are testing the waters and trying to find out what a surfing public, that isn’t dance mad, is interested in learning about their field.

When I first heard about the Virtual Pillow, it sounded overly grand and potentially unwieldy. But it is not. It’s a carefully curated project in its nascent stage. Like Alice, who goes down the rabbit hole to find out why a white rabbit is speaking English and is holding a timepiece, I want to follow this new project. Its deliberate coyness intrigues me. I don’t think it will become a morass of material, clogging up my broadband.


Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival: Never a Dull Moment

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

If you’ve ever sat in the theater watching a dance and wondered how the performers went from working with the choreographer in the studio to being masters of their own movement on the stage, the Emmy award-winning filmmaker Elliot Caplan has made just the documentary for you. It’s called 15 Days of Dance – The Making of Ghost Light. On August 5 at the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, Caplan spent an hour describing his process and showing an excerpt of his 2010 film. Why just an excerpt? Because 15 Days is 22.5 hours long.

Clearly not a commercial enterprise, 15 Days bears the mark of Caplan’s advanced station as a documentary filmmaker of dance. Like Merce Cunningham, who gave him his first job filming dancers (and whom he served for 15 years as the company’s filmmaker in residence), Caplan records movement from unconventional perspectives. In 15 days, he digs deep into the ritualistic process of—watch, do, repeat, watch, do, repeat—that is the basis for most dance creation. While this process may sound like a snore, it is not. The twelve dancers of the American Ballet Theatre Studio Company, who are the center of the film, are hothouse flowers. All under age 20, they are schooled within an inch of their life in the rigors of classical technique. It’s fascinating watching them take codified ballet movements (passé, pirouette, penché) and slowly fashion them into the narrative threads that give choreographer Brian Reeder’s Ghost Light its glow.

Wearing a Yankee baseball cap and sitting with Jacob’s Pillow Scholar in Residence Maura Keefe, Caplan demonstrated that he is a devotional dance documenter—and a mensch. While most dance documenters arrive on the scene when the dance is done and paid for, in the case of 15 Days Caplan took the initiative. He convinced the University at Buffalo, where he serves as a professor and the Center for the Moving Image’s artistic director, to foot the bill for the creation of a dance. When Caplan got the funding, he made two calls: to New York City Ballet and American Ballet Theatre. The ABT Studio Company called back first. They recommended for the job the choreographer Brian Reeder, a frequent contributor to the company’s repertoire.

Formerly a dancer with ABT, New York City Ballet, and Ballet Frankfurt, Reeder doesn’t mind being around moving cameras while making a dance in the breathless space of 15 days. His ballet, set to a recording of Aaron Copland’s Music for the Theater with Leonard Bernstein conducting, pays homage to the mix of sleaze and innocence redolent of vaudevillian stage culture.

Yet 15 Days isn’t focused on the ballet’s subject or the final product. Caplan documents the job of dancers, working day in and day out in a bare bones studio. In the half-hour segment seen at The Pillow, Caplan creates a near seamless compilation of the 15 days in which the dancers learned Reeder’s material. We see the dance from beginning to the end, but it’s not in a continuous spate of time. At the beginning of the rehearsal process (and the dance), the performers are tentative. Watching them is at times is cringe-making: many of the women have bodies of 12 years olds and their vamping like vaudevillians just doesn’t cut it. Yet by the end of the 15 days (and the end of the ballet), the dancers almost own the material. (And the pixy leg blond, who I noticed most, has acquired just enough je ne sais quoi to deliver a sexy backbend).

Ultimately, this section resembles time-lapse film. As the lithe dancers repeat, absorb, and own Reeder’s choreographic material, it’s like watching petals of an exotic flower opening in slow motion. When the dancers take command of the material, the film blossoms.

You can see three of the 20 segments of Caplan’s epic work on how a dance is created from the ground up by going to 15DaysOfDance.com. It’s worth the trip.

As for the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, where this free event took place, it is a dance Mecca. Anyone interested in the following—ballet, modern, jazz; Butoh, Flamenco, tap; dance film, dance history, and historical dance sites (the Pillow is a National Historic Landmark)—should make a pilgrimage to Becket, Massachusetts in the Berkshires. It’s only a 20-minute drive from Tanglewood. It’s beyond special. http://www.jacobspillow.org/