Quantcast










Theater, Dance, Comedy and Performance in Chicago

At Zeroes End: Dance in Chicago, 2000-2009

Dance No Comments »
Hubbard Street Dance Chicago's "Extremely Close"/Photo: Todd Rosenberg

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago's "Extremely Close"/Photo: Todd Rosenberg

By Brian Hieggelke

Dance exploded in the zeroes, fueled on by successful transitions at major establishments and the opening of significant new venues. Any consideration of dance in Chicago starts with our world-renowned homegrown company, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago (HSDC), which commenced the decade with the transition in its artistic leadership from Lou Conte, who’d founded the group in 1977 and built it into one of the city’s leading cultural exports, to Jim Vincent. Vincent didn’t miss a beat, building on Conte’s foundation, and greatly expanding the company’s formerly rather limited performance presence in its hometown by expanding to quarterly Chicago engagements, thanks in part to the opening of the perfectly sized Harris Theater for Music and Dance in November 2003. By 2008, HSDC had grown to a seven-million-dollar operating budget and Vincent himself was moving on, returning to the Nederlands Dans Theater, where he’d spent much of his career as a performer, passing the artistic reins at HSDC to his former associate, Glenn Edgerton.

Meanwhile, Chicago’s national reputation as a dance center was being augmented by its resuscitation of the esteemed Joffrey Ballet, which, in a state of financial crisis in the mid-nineties, had thrown something of a Hail Mary pass by departing the nation’s cultural capital of New York to see if it could make it in Chicago (it had long been extremely successful here on its tours, a tradition mirrored today by Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, which sold a whopping 14,416 tickets to its annual engagement at the Auditorium Theatre in 2009). Make it here it did, and by the dawn of this decade, it had established itself as a pillar of Chicago’s cultural community, even becoming the subject of a Robert Altman film, “The Company,” in 2003. Read the rest of this entry »

Hubbard Street announces new artistic director in Dutch swap

-News etc., Comedy, Dance No Comments »

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, whose current artistic director Jim Vincent is leaving to take the helm at Nederlands Dans Theater, has appointed Glenn Edgerton, a former artistic director of the same Dutch company to take his place. And if you’re wondering what’s so great about about NDT, it just so happens that they’re performing in Chicago next week at Auditorium Theatre.

Here’s the press release from Hubbard Street:

GLENN EDGERTON APPOINTED AS THE THIRD ARTISTIC DIRECTOR IN HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO’S 32-YEAR HISTORY

Nation’s Foremost Contemporary Dance Repertory Company to be led by Former Artistic Director of Nederlands Dans Theater I

CHICAGO – June 10, 2009 – Today, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago (HSDC) announced the appointment of internationally renowned artistic leader and dancer, Glenn Edgerton, to the role of artistic director.  Edgerton’s appointment results from an international search conducted by the board during the last several months following the announcement of the departure this summer of Jim Vincent, HSDC’s artistic director of nine years.

Edgerton, 49, brings over 30 years of experience working with the great dance institutions of the world including the Nederlands Dans Theater, The Colburn School of Performing Arts and The Joffrey Ballet. Read the rest of this entry »

Preview: Hubbard Street Dance Summer Series

Dance Previews, Recommended Dance Shows No Comments »

gnawa_lanterns_g177RECOMMENDED

Hats off to Hubbard Street for adding a Summer program to their season. Now that the Midwest has finally thawed, folks are venturing out, calling in, cooking out and—I hope—getting out to see some dance. And this is the month for it people—starting with Chicago’s best-known contemporary dance company, which presents three strong works this weekend. “Slipstream,” a new work by Hubbard Street artistic director Jim Vincent, moves across the stage in elegant waves and eddies, riding the strings in Benjamin Britten’s “Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge.” In contrast, the revival of Nacho Duato’s “Gnawa” surges and heaves in tribal ensemble movements; slithers, entwines and blossoms in an organic, hypnotic duet. The Summer Series also provides a second opportunity to see Alejandro Cerrudo’s extremely appealing “Extremely Close;” the clean lines, black-and-white mise en scene and downright sexy pas de deux make Cerrudo’s work accessible yet gracefully sophisticated. (Sharon Hoyer)

At the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, 205 E. Randolph (312)334-7777. June 4-7; Thurs at 7:30, Friday at 6:30, Sat at 8 and Sun at 3pm. $25-$86.

Preview: Hubbard Street Spring Program/Harris Theater

Dance, Dance Previews, Recommended Dance Shows No Comments »
Photo: Todd Rosenberg

Photo: Todd Rosenberg

RECOMMENDED

Hubbard Street offers a diverse palate this weekend, with revivals and premiere pieces ranging from the elegant to the primal. In the former category, place the revival of Artistic Director Jim Vincent’s “counter/part,” a blithe roundel that playfully weaves classically inspired choreography into Bach’s contrapuntal tapestry, and Danny Ezralow’s “SF/LB,” which matches Bernstein’s score in stylish, urbane theatricality. In the latter belongs the Chicago premiere of Andrea Miller’s “Blush”—fierce, passionate, with grey-and-leather uniformed costuming and a rock score that evoke a post-industrial landscape, leaving plenty of space on stage for flushed emotions to reach the boiling point. Rising star Alejandro Cerrudo’s “Off Screen” will be performed for the first time; the preview clips reinforce Cerrudo’s fast-growing reputation for soulful, fluidly sensitive choreography. Also on the program is a revival of Lucas Crandall’s fun, stompy, be-booted “Gimmie.” (Sharon Hoyer)

At the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, 205 E. Randolph (312)850-9744. April 1 & 2 at 7:30pm, April 3 & 4 at 8pm and Sunday, April 5 at 3pm. $25-86.

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago announces 2009-2010 season

Comedy, Dance, Season Announcements No Comments »

Here’s the press release from HSDC:

HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO ANNOUNCES 2009-10 SEASON

World-Class Art Reaches Chicago Audiences, On Stage and Around The City

CHICAGO – March 11, 2009 – Today, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago (HSDC) announced its 2009-10 season, unveiling a premiere-packed series of performances at home in Chicago, domestic and international touring, pre-professional training initiatives and innovative collaborations with cultural partners in the city. Read the rest of this entry »

The Players 2009: The 50 people who really perform for Chicago

Players 50 3 Comments »

What makes Chicago’s theater world special? We picked up the latest issue of Entertainment Weekly for clues. In the cover story, “CSI” star William Petersen explains his decision to leave his role as one of the top paid actors in television, earning a rumored $600,000 an episode, to move back to Chicago and Chicago theater: “It was too safe for me at this point. So I needed to try and break that, and the way to do that, for me, is the theater.” EW went on to credit Petersen for much of the show’s success, notably bringing a theatrical ensemble philosophy to play in its production. Or consider the runaway success of Steppenwolf’s “August: Osage County,” which transferred to Broadway,  receiving critical acclaim and multiple Tony Awards, not by shaking it up with Broadway “names” but instead by virtually transferring the Steppenwolf production intact, with the addition of lead producer and fellow Chicagoan Steve Traxler. What makes Chicago theater—or for that matter, Chicago dance or any other form of performance practiced on our stages—special? We’d contend it’s the power of the ensemble, the spirit of collaboration that champions artistic risk-taking and subordinates the commercial. And so, in that spirit, the critical ensemble responsible for Newcity’s ongoing stage coverage presents our take on the most influential people on and offstage in Chicago. Read the rest of this entry »

Preview: Winter Series/Hubbard Street Dance

Dance, Dance Previews, Recommended Dance Shows No Comments »

RECOMMENDED

If you haven’t yet seen this Chicago institution, the upcoming Winter Series at the Harris Theater is sure to be an appealing introduction to the most popular modern dance company in the city. The program includes two premieres: “One On One” by Hubbard Street’s artistic director Jim Vincent and “Walking Mad,” a highly publicized new work by Johann Inger set to Ravel’s “Bolero”—familiar, yet bold choice of material and one certainly well suited to the company’s crowd-pleasing, dramatic athleticism. Also on the program is the elegant, balletic “Strokes Through the Tail” by Marguerite Donlon and “The Set” by Lucas Crandall. (Sharon Hoyer)

At the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, 205 E. Randolph, (312)334-7777. Wednesday, Dec 3-Sunday, Dec 7. $25-$86.

Dance Ambassadors

Dance No Comments »

“We’ve had the opportunity to work with a very diverse group of distinguished voices,” Artistic Director Jim Vincent says of the highly contrasting choreographers his company has showcased over its thirty years.  What sets Hubbard Street Dance Chicago apart from its industry peers is their athletic, innovated repertoire, a collection of pieces by some of the world’s most renowned dance makers set on a company of exuberant dancers. The 2008 Spring Series will consist of two programs featuring existing works from their catalog and introducing three new pieces to its repertoire.

“Two come from in-house,” Vincent tells of his choreographers. “It becomes a much more personal experience.  They are working with their colleagues.”  Company dancer Alejandro Cerrudo’s “Extremely Close” will take the stage during Program 1 (March 26-30). In this, his second premiere with Hubbard Street, Cerrudo draws from all around him.  The inspiration came from many diverse sources,” says Cerrudo, “the dancers, the music, conversations with people that I’ve had, images, my past, other artists, memories.” Music is integral to Cerrudo’s work.  The 27-year-old from Madrid, Spain compares his relationship with music to that of you or I with air.  Vincent promises a sophisticated, subtle work with striking visuals set to piano solos by Philip Glass and Dustin O’Halloran.

Series 2 (April 1-5) will welcome New York-based choreographer and director Doug Varone to the Hubbard Street family.  His piece isThe Constant Shift of Pulse,” set to a score by contemporary composer John Adams. It is a rarity for Varone to give a work to be toured as much as Hubbard Street’s schedule demands. After some coaxing from Vincent, Varone agreed to set a piece on the entirety of the sizable Chicago company, a work that would not be accommodated by his own acclaimed company of eight. “If it feels like you are dancing it is wrong,” Varone tells his dancers.  “Many people say that my work looks spontaneous, and I love hearing that. It is all highly choreographed, but giving an audience the feel that it is happening in the moment is key.” 

Also in Series 2 see Lucas Crandall’s “The Set.” It will be the Hubbard Street artistic associate’s first foray into humor with this Edwardian romp for three dancers.  “These days finding humor in dance is hard to come by,” Vincent says.  He thinks Crandall has found it.

“It’s always great to be home,” Vincent says, but they won’t get long to enjoy it.  After the short sit down, Chicago’s unofficial contemporary dance ambassadors will be off to Germany to show the Rhineland just what is great about dance. (William Scott)

At the Harris Theater for Music & Dance, 205 East Randolph, (312)334-7777. This production is now closed.

Dancing About Architecture

Dance No Comments »

By Debbie Goldgaber

Talk to a choreographer and it won’t take long for the topic of collaboration to come up—from set-design to staging, it’s all about multimedia and multi-disciplinary approaches. Despite the recent buzz, such collaborations are hardly new to the dance world. Think Martha Graham’s famous lifelong collaboration with sculptor Isamu Noguchi (beginning in 1935) or William Forsythe’s association with architectural innovator Daniel Liebskind. Closer to home, we’ve seen Hubbard Street Dance company collaborate and perform with the CSO, to brilliant effect. In this context, HSDC’s latest multi-disciplinary enterprise—this time in collaboration with IIT’s College of Architecture—might be seen as an extension of previous efforts. But there are reasons for thinking that the company’s January 27 performance at S.R. Crown Hall will be a historic event of sorts. In addition to premiering some original choreography, the evening marks the culmination of an experiment original enough to inspire imitation.

The experiment began with the proverbial meeting of the minds. In this case, the minds of award-winning architect Dirk Denison and critically acclaimed choreographer Jim Vincent, artistic director of HSDC. Like his Harvard teacher Daniel Liebskind, Denison has a profound appreciation for dance—and presciently saw the possibility of a mutually beneficial relationship. Luckily, it was not difficult to convince Vincent. “The motivating question for me is always how to imagine presentations outside of the black box, outside the proscenium stage,” he says.

While it’s fairly intuitive that dance has something to gain from innovative spatial environments, it’s less clear what architects stand to gain from dance. Denison’s hunch was, well, quite a lot. “I feel strongly that dance is among the most conscious ways that we occupy space and building consciousness like that among architectural students is critical to their education,” he says. “Design, as a function, has a vocabulary—namely, space; in dance it’s about movement, body and space. So, the immediate goal was to explore the nature of this overlap.” Denison was convinced that in working jointly with choreographers and dancers, and directly accessing a related creative process, his students would come away with new methods for working.

There were, however, some pitfalls to avoid. Too often, both Denison and Vincent admit, collaboration amounts to little more than compromise. “What we were after was reaching new terrain,” explains Vincent, “a genuine integration of creative processes.” To encourage this integration, IIT students were exposed to movement classes at Hubbard Street. Far from perfecting their pliés, the exercises focused on “the experience of movement itself, stimulating awareness of the surrounding space and how to move in and out of it.”

More concretely, what brought the architects, dancers and choreographers together was a shared space—in this case Mies van de Rohe’s masterpiece, S.R. Crown Hall. Tucked amid several architectural gems on IIT’s South Loop campus, the iconic Crown Hall houses the school’s architecture program. Jokingly referring to the space as the glass-box version of a one-room schoolhouse, it was Denison’s idea to stage the dances here—no doubt because such an open, undifferentiated space offers the spatial equivalent of a blank canvas.

As anticipated, the unique space and its constraints encouraged the dancers and architects to play with what is typically a fixed-arrangement between audience and performers. To accommodate the diverse works in the context of a single, built environment, the designers seem to have adopted something of a peripatetic strategy, keeping the performers and audience moving. For choreographer Lucas Crandall’s piece, dancers perform on a ramp to a seated audience. Audience and performers then reverse positions for Alejandro Cerrudo’s work. Finally, the audience surrounds the dancers performing Brian Enos’ piece. Audience members are advised to wear comfortable clothes.

As with dance, innovation in architecture requires the capacity for spatial play—or experimentation. And while architecture directly thematizes space, dance, at its best, shows us new possibilities of inhabiting it. Viewed in this way, the benefits of this “cross-pollination,” as Vincent sees it, are barely realized: “This is the point from where we jump off—now that we’ve gotten into each other’s heads and into each other’s bodies.”

 Hubbard Street Dance Chicago at S.R. Crown Hall, 3360 South State, (312)850-9744. This production is now closed

 

Review: Hubbard Street Dance Chicago & the Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Dance, Dance Previews, Recommended Dance Shows No Comments »

RECOMMENDED

If you’re a dance company, you need live music to dance to, and if you’re a symphony orchestra, you need something for your audience to look at other than folks sitting there in tails and gowns.  Such is the mutual benefit for the collaboration between Hubbard Street Dance Chicago and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, a partnership that is celebrating its fifth anniversary.  Past collaborations and new works will be spotlighted at this special anniversary one-night-only performance, which will include the first-ever collaboration between the two organizations, “counter/part,” choreographed by Hubbard artistic director Jim Vincent and set to movements from Bach’s “Brandenburg” Concertos along with the return of 2004’s “SF/LB,” set to Leonard Bernstein’s “Prelude, Fugue and Riffs,” with choreography by Daniel Ezralow as well as an excerpt from Vincent’s 2007 “Palladio” with music by Karl Jenkins and a preview performance of Doug Varone’s “The Constant Shift of Pulse,” set to music of John Adams, which will be officially premiered by Hubbard in March.  Also included on this Edwin Outwater conducted program are Mendelssohn’s “Hebrides” Overture and Bartok’s “Romanian Folk Dances.”  (Dennis Polkow) 

At the Symphony Center, 220 S. Michigan, (312)294-3000. This production is now closed.