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"Its like a
truffle," I enthused to The Beautiful Companion at intermission of the Mark Morris
Dance Group performance in Zellerbach Hall, "You bite into the truffle and you get
the flavor and texture of the rich chocolate exterior, then the burst of the different,
contrasting flavor and texture of the filling. The two sets of flavors and texture play
off of one another, adding complexity and pleasure to each other."
But then I realized the limitation of that metaphor as applied to the
genius of Mark Morris. Only two textures, only two flavors. For Morris, wed have to
expand the image to a major banquet of delights. Well leave that literary exercise
to the food critics.
The current evening of music and dance offers the music of
masters, two of Brahms Liebesliederwalzer opuses, choreographed in 1982 and
1989, and Handels Dixit Dominus, the premiere engagement of this dance.
Morris choreography seems to grow organically out of his musical choices and is
always impeccably tuned to both the broad sweep and the detailed phrasings and tones of
the accompanying compositions. "Accompanying" is an almost dangerous word here,
because both of these pieces of music are exquisite settings of text to voice with
instrumental accompaniment, in themselves works of complexity and great beauty. In the
Brahms, four voices, in a variety of solos and combinations, are accompanied by four hands
at the piano. The Handel, too, has four voices plus a chorus and orchestra.
Add to the lush and superbly performed music, with its textual base,
the equal partnership of the visual experience of the dance and Morris own themes
expressed through the combination of both: the totality becomes of a richness at once so
dense, so multilayered, as to be overwhelming. Both The Beautiful Companion and your
reviewer felt that there was more there than could be absorbed at first viewing. For all
that, the lightness of touch and the sheer sensuality of the sights and sounds remain
accessible pleasures in and of themselves. There is pleasure as well in the vocabulary of
Morris choreography, his trademark steps, gestures, and patterns which, for all the
differences and variations among his works, are recognizable as uniquely his.
Since the Liebesliederwalzer compositions are about love and
passion, the context of the Morris Group itself as a long term, ongoing community is
implicit in the work and explicit in the performance. The dance varies couplings of men
with women, women with women, men with men, as well as groups of three or more. It
occasionally challenges gender assumptions, as when a woman lifts another woman - not
something one sees in the dance, unexpected, and, in this case, as choreographed and
performed, intentionally funny. (Morris sense of humor is rarely far from the
surface and often provides leavening between the more serious sequences of his dances. He
can turn the simple twist of a shoulder, or a head poking up from a group of prone bodies,
into a deliciously comedic moment.)
Morris incorporates an allemande-like step from American square dancing
(which, in turn, has its roots in German dances) - a pattern of changing partners, also an
expression of the freedom of love and passion in the pre-AIDS community of 1982. From the
open, funny, high energy level, Morris segues easily to the more lyrical, more
sensual. There is a segment with three couples prone on the stage, one partners body
atop the others. It all coalesces, in the literal aspects, but also in the
compositional patterns of movement and bodies on the stage, as if one with the music - and
all this with seeming effortlessness.
The later, 1989, piece has a less joyful, more restrained, perhaps even
more formal feel to it. There is still love, there is still passion, but defenses are up;
a deadly epidemic has put a community on guard, limitations on earlier exuberance. Lines
in the lyrics say, "The paths are still damp from my tears" and
"Thats how my heart feels
our love, our lust, and our loathing." At
the end of the dance one man dances in turn with each of the other dancers who, one by
one, leave the stage, even as, one by one, lovers were lost to the deadly virus during the
mid and late 80s, leaving the survivor alone.
The Handel work is severe, the text rife with images of conflict
: "enemies as footstools," "The Lord
shall execute kings in the day of
His wrath
shall fill the places with dead bodies.. shall execute the heads of many
countries
" The choreography, too, seems more angular, full of high
energy - but an aggressive, edgy energy of concentration rather than exuberance. Its more
uniform level of intensity rivets the attention and almost assaults in its seriousness. It
seems more abstract as well, less easily translated from dance terms to literal message.
Further viewings will undoubtedly lead to further insight into intended meanings - or not.
In terms of pure dance, it is vintage, mature, masterful Morris.
- Arthur Lazere