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Stephen Petronio Dance Company
Strange Attractors
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Not so long ago Stephen Petronio was the bad boy of
modern dance, delighting in exploring extremes. His
costume designers were ahead of the avant garde,
dressing men in corsets and such. The music
sensibility was similar. The movement was
explosive, frenetic. As his current
engagement under the auspices of San Francisco Performances shows, he is maturing without
losing his inventiveness. The edginess is
controlled, and his dances are constructed more cohesively.
For the past several years the
Stephen Petronio Company has enjoyed a special relationship with San Francisco
Performances, becoming their first artists-in-residence, conducting workshops and
presenting performances at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. This years visit features the completed
work, Strange Attractors. Part I received its world premiere in San
Francisco in 1999; the work was completed in 2000 and shown at New Yorks Joyce
Theater.
Strange Attractors, inspired by chaos theory, is in
two parts preceded by a brief Prelude. The cogent
Prelude states some of Petronios thematic material.
The dancers (four men and four women with Petronio, in his only appearance in the
work, roughly in the middle) are close together in a line facing the audience. Gestures dominate this section, as the dancers
adhere largely to the linear format. Dressed
in black tops and briefs, some with long, tassel-like belts, they lean into one another,
occasionally circling around the next person. There
are some embraces and self-fondlinghands to chest.
At one point the heads go back and several dancers spray a liquid into the air,
recalling a whale spewing.
The first part begins with an
expansive male solo that establishes the tone of the movement in this portion of the work. Gerald Casel fills the stage with large leaps and
turns. He swoops in graceful arcs, a sudden
arabesque extending his leg backward. The
music by Michael Nyman is Copland-like. The
solo is followed by a duet for a man and a woman who perform the same steps coming towards
the audience, employing gestures including a clenched fist that then recur throughout the
piece. As other dancers are introduced,
Petronio first places them in parallel lines, and then breaks the lines. The music, scored for stringed instruments, is
lyrical and, at times, wistful. Towards the
end of the section, the stage is emptied of movement and one woman begins to dance to the
sound of a solo piano. The rest of the
dancers return, and the backdrop (cyclorama) is raised to reveal the backstage space.
Just as the first part was
peaceful (albeit filled with energy), the second part is intense. This change is reflected in the lighting, which
shifts to strong colors on the cyclorama, red and orange predominating. Two silver spheres hang in mid-air, adding
reflections. The structure of the dance
begins formally, with dancers in two lines, one line circling around the other; then it
breaks apart. The movements, which recall the
turns and arabesques of the first part, are now filled with punching and kicking motifs. Petronio explores different combinations of
dancers and moves, and brings the second part to a swift conclusion.
Every dancer in the company
reveals excellent training and a focused commitment to the work being performed. They are Gerald Casel, Thang Dao, Gino Grenek, Ana
Gonzalez, Ashleigh Leite, Jimena Paz, Shila Tirabassi, and Todd Williams. Director/dancer Petronio
is not one to make over-long dances: he says what
he has to say without becoming self-indulgent.