#baryshnikov arts center
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Patti Smith's 'Woolgathering': A Spoken-Word Opera Experience
Exploring “Woolgathering”: Patti Smith’s Spoken-Word Opera “Woolgathering” is a captivating collection of prose poems authored by the iconic Patti Smith, renowned for her influence as a singer-songwriter and punk pioneer. Released in 1992, this slim volume serves as a poignant memoir reflecting on the intricacies of childhood—specifically, the imaginative realm often inhabited by poets. Smith…
#Baryshnikov Arts Center#childhood memories#choreography#Dance Heginbotham#live music#Oliver Tompkins Ray#Patti Smith#performance review#prose poems#spoken word opera#Woolgathering
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Baryshnikov Arts announces this summer, from June 10–16, 2024, it will present its first annual Bloodlines Interwoven Festival, to take place at Kaatsbaan Cultural Park in Tivoli, NY, supported by a grant from the Mellon Foundation
#Janet Walker#Haute-Lifestyle.com#The-Entertainment-Zone.com#mikhail baryshnikov#baryshnikov arts center#nyc#Dance#Theater#Music#arts festival
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The Significance Of The Day...
Lilacs in bloom. Bursting off branches in abundance of pale purple. This season of bloom seems particularly full of fragrance and bounty. Large oval clusters boasting Vermont spring. I once thought the fragrance of lilacs existed only at our family home where I once ran up the hill towards 665 Adams Street and past Kramer’s farm. I have found that the sweet aroma floats over my path now as…
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#art#art exhibit#art exhibition#artist#ballerina#ballet#baryshnikov#dreams#Hanover nh#Lincoln center#mom#mothers#painter#painting#vermont#vermont artist
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Yevgeny Moiseyev, the mayor of the Russian city of Kislovodsk, announced Sunday that a quote from ballet dancer and choreographer Mikhail Baryshnikov will be removed from a local choreography school because he spoke out against the invasion of Ukraine.
Photos published by the mayor show the following quote from Baryshnikov on one of the school’s walls: “I do not try to dance better than anyone else. I only try to dance better than myself.”
“I’m currently working to figure out who approved the idea to feature a quote from a person who, while he may be a genius, abandoned his native country and doesn’t support it, our heroic boys, or our president in the fight that we all, as a country, and as the entire city of Kislovodsk, are waging for our future, the future of our children, and the entire country,” wrote Moiseyev.
He said he’s ordered for Baryshnikov’s quote to be replaced with “the words of one of our geniuses, a true patriot of their native land.”
Mikhail Baryshnikov was born in Soviet Latvia. In the 1970s, he emigrated to the U.S., where he joined the American Ballet Theatre and began performing in films and on Broadway. He now leads the Baryshnikov Arts Center in New York. After Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Baryshnikov began raising money for Ukrainian refugees along with writer Boris Akunin and economist Sergei Guriev as part of the True Russia project. The Russian authorities have banned the initiative as an “undesirable” organization.
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Antonio Velardo shares: Review: Tennis Throuples and the Ghosts of Ballets Russes by Brian Seibert
By Brian Seibert Two dances at Baryshnikov Arts Center are part of Christopher Williams’s project of reimagining, and often queering, works by Diaghilev’s company. Published: October 13, 2023 at 12:24PM from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/vxnU9M3 via IFTTT
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Google Maps Lifelist: The places that have defined me as a human being.
NOTE: Photos will be added over time, but are not accessible directly from Google Maps lists.
Over the 70 years that I’ve lived on this planet, there have been many lifetime milestones associated with a specific place. This list commemorates those places which have figured prominently in my life, either because they have or had great meaning to my existence or are places which I frequently visited.
Baskin-Robbins
$ · Ice Cream · Bowling Green
Ice cream chain with lots of flavors
The original Baskin-Robbins Ice Cream Shop used to be located at 1705 U.S. 31 W Bypass, Bowling Green, KY 42101, but has recently (in last several years) been rebuilt and move further east on the Old By-Pass in 'downtown' Bowling Green, located at 1542 U.S. 31-W Bypass, Suite 9, Bowling Green, KY.
The 'old' Baskin-Robbins was the place that my wife and I had our first date, too many years ago to recall when to confess, but, of course, I do remember at it was more than 45 years ago. We moved away from Bowling Green long ago but still fondly remember our fun ice-cream eating times at 31.
Baskin-Robbins 31, as it is known in Japan as "31" [sirty-one], has been a part of our lives even once we moved to Tokyo in 1979, and it really hasn't changed much since then --except for the menu items increasing and the few of the old flavors have been either renewed or replaced. Nowadays, we go to the Baskin-Robbins Shop in Hibarigaoka, a suburb of Tokyo, enjoying a delicious scoop just like we did 45 years ago usually after awaiting our granddaughter's piano lesson to finish, not 200 yards away. Our 7-year-old granddaughter has learned to love a sugar cone with her favorite scoop of Baskin-Robbins ice cream. z
WKU Fine Arts Center - Music Department
University · Bowling Green, KY
I graduated in 1976 with a B.A. cum laude in Music History & Literature, French, and Education (Teacher certification). Initially, the Music Department was housed in its own 5-story building, located behind the library annex building. The construction of the Fine Arts Center, where the Department of Music is now housed, occurred during my junior year while I was away on my Junior Year Abroad at the Paul Valery campus of the University of Montpellier, France from Sept 1973 to July 1974. My wife, Shizuko, a foreign graduate student in piano performance, started studying at WKU in the fall semester of 1975, just one year after I had returned as a senior student at WKU's music department.
Tokyo Bunka Kaikan
Concert hall · Taito City, Tokyo, Japan
Over the years, I played the part of 'supernumerary' (a stage extra) for many foreign opera, dance and theatre companies that have toured and performed in Japan, often at the old Tokyo Bunka Kaikan. I am visible while in costume in each of the three photos above.
Many years ago before the construction of the Shin Kokuritsu Gekijo (New National Theatre), there were many opera and ballet performances by foreign dance and theatre companies who performed at the Tokyo Bunka Kaikan hall. During some of the performances, there was a need for foreign staff to be 'hired' as stage extras. I was one of the people who did that job for about 10 years.. In the process, I was a stage extra or supernumerary for such companies as La Scala Opera, Deutsches Opera, The Metropolitan Opera, the Royal Opera, the Royal Ballet, and American Ballet Theater, and several more. There were anywhere from 10 to nearly 100 people, mostly foreign extras, who were hired depending on the production. In doing so, I got to see some world-class opera and dance performances from right on stage, with such stars as Luciano Pavarotti, Agnes Balsa, Placido Domingo, Jose Carreras, and with directors and ballet masters as Mikhail Baryshnikov. My younger son, Paul, was only 7 when he was in the American Ballet Theatre performance of Giselle. Amazingly, he was instructed on how to act in one scene by Baryshnikov himself, I know as I was on stage in rehearsal as an extra, too.
Machiko Hasegawa Grave
Cemetery · Fuchu
Machiko Hasegawa was one of the first female Japanese manga artists, who lived from January 19, 1920 to May 27, 1992. Her famous comic strip, Sazae-san, ran in newspaper comics from 1946 until 1974. It become a regular TV cartoon series that still runs today. Not far from Machiko Hasegawa’s grave on the corner of the open roundabout stand two crepe myrtle trees that bloom in July every year. The blooms last until mid-October and there are other shades of pink, violet, white and almost red crepe myrtle trees throughout the cemetery.
The gravestone for Machiko Hasegawa, the Japanese anime artist, located in Tamabochi Cemetery, not far from our family home in Tamacho, Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan.
Musashino-Mori Park
Park · 府中市 (Fuchu City, Tokyo, Japan)
Plane spotting, leafy walks & sports
We often take walks with our dogs in Musashino-no-Mori Park. It has green fields, a forested mini-hill that you can climb and explore, a large pond where birds gather to search for food, and an observation point for the Chofu Airport. ふるさとの丘 On top so the highest point to the south is the Furusato no Oka. Here you can see sample typical rocks, stones, and minerals from each of the 47 prefectures of the Japanese archipelago on display in 2 m by 1m plaques placed in the ground at the summit of a small hill. The 47 plaques are lined up along the edge of the cement sidewalk that curves up and around the hill.
多磨霊園のスギ (Tama Bochi (Reien) no Cedar Tree)
Tourist attraction · Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan
In all seasons of the year, we take our dogs, a family of Toy Manchester Terriers, for a walk in the beautifully serene Tama Bochi Cemetery. Even Ichiro, our oldest dog, who passed away at the age of 20 years old, loved to take a walk here, most often by a neighbor, Mr. Nishiyama, who was 80 years old when he passed just a year after his beloved friend, Ichiro, died.
Brunswick Executive Airport
Airport · Brunswick, Georgia
Originally, this airport was part of the Brunswick Naval Air Station, where my father was stationed during the Korean War as part of the weather ballon unit. While my home state of Georgia hasn't been my actual home since I was an 8-year-old third grader in Ft. Oglethorpe, Georgia. I frequently visit Georgia and have and have had family there on both my father's and mother's side. BRUNSWICK is where we had planned to hold a family reunion this past August, which was postponed due to he ongoing COVID-19 pandemic., and we had planned to have all the family reunion attendees visit the BNA Museum. Therefore, 2020 was not only a very significant election, the January 5, 2021 runoff election,deciding the control of the country, makes my connections to this place in Georgia actually very personal., and significant for my own history and family legacy. I was born in Brunswick 😃GA, 67 years ago ( as of Nov 2020) since my still teenage parents moved there. Shortly after their Halloween wedding on October 31, 1952, my dad was transferred to the Brunswick Naval Air Station, for which this museum was created to commemorate. My mother, an 18-year-old high school homecoming queen, Rebecca, and her high school sweetheart and co-captain of their small rural high school’s football team, Jerry, were my late parents. My parents, both from Cave City, KY, were stationed at Brunswick Naval Air Station from 1952-1954, where I was born (in Nov. 1953).
Brunswick Naval Aviation Museum
Museum · Brunswick, Georgia
Originally, this airport was part of the Brunswick Naval Air Station, where my father was stationed during the Korean War as part of the weather ballon unit. While my home state of Georgia hasn't been my actual home since I was an 8-year-old third grader in Ft. Oglethorpe, Georgia. I frequently visit Georgia and have and have had family there on both my father's and mother's side. BRUNSWICK is where we had planned to hold a family reunion this past August, which was postponed due to he ongoing COVID-19 pandemic., and we had planned to have all the family reunion attendees visit the BNA Museum. Therefore, 2020 was not only a very significant election, the January 5, 2021 runoff election,deciding the control of the country, makes my connections to this place in Georgia actually very personal., and significant for my own history and family legacy. I was born in Brunswick 😃GA, 67 years ago ( as of Nov 2020) since my still teenage parents moved there. Shortly after their Halloween wedding on October 31, 1952, my dad was transferred to the Brunswick Naval Air Station, for which this museum was created to commemorate. My mother, an 18-year-old high school homecoming queen, Rebecca, and her high school sweetheart and co-captain of their small rural high school’s football team, Jerry, were my late parents. My parents, both from Cave City, KY, were stationed at Brunswick Naval Air Station from 1952-1954, where I was born.
Soya De Maadjou
$ · Restaurant · Djohong, Cameroon, West Africa
It’s been a long time since I was there, actually in December 2000 to January 2001, so I’m sure the place has changed. So long in fact that I doubt this restaurant existed then, though it may have been the one I ate in. I spent two weeks in and around the village of Djohong, which at the time had no electricity and no wells for water. However, I had a very memorable time there and the great memories of what I experienced there will live with me forever. I was a member of an Earthwatch expedition to assist an American nurse named Phyllis Jansyn, who had immigrated to Cameroon in order to continue her former Peace Corps work in Djohong village. Her goals were to help the people of the village get medical care, to assist in safe childbirth, to provide medical care to prevent, get safe , clean drinking water, and cure various diseases caused by parasites. There were small groups of 5-8 people at three or four times a year who were eco-volunteers through Earthwatch. We lived in a rustic, straw-thatched cabins and worked for two weeks, assisting Phyllis in administering vaccines, and checking for intestinal parasites in the villages in the Djohong province.
Van Meter Hall
Western Kentucky University · Bowling Green, KY
I started as a freshman at WKU in the fall of 1971. As I was a music major involved in many musical organizations, I had many chances to perform in Van Meter Hall. It was also the venue for the 1976 performance of the visiting Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra. That year, the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO), made a short tour of the US, performing in only 4 cities, of which Bowling Green was one. I was studying Russian with Mania Ritter, a long-time Foreign Language Department faculty member at the time. My wife and I hosted 3 members of the LPO by taking them around the city by car, and having them to our house for dinner that evening. The LPO's performance of Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade was one of the most outstanding musical experiences of my life.
Eloise B Houchens Center
Non-profit organization · Bowling Green, KY
The Eloise B. Houchens Center was the venue for my parents' 50th Wedding Anniversary Celebration in October 2002. Jerry Franklin Brooks and Rebecca Lewis Brooks were married in Cave City, KY on October 31, 1952 (68 years ago today as I write this). They had come to live in Bowling Green in 1963 ,after the birth of their fourth child. All four of their children graduated from Bowling Green High School, two of whom still live in the city. The Anniversary Celebration was a public event, which had over 75 people in attendance, including family, friends, fellow church-goers, and other people in the South Central Kentucky area.
Université Jean Moulin Lyon 3 Faculty of Philosophy
University · Lyon, France
I have returned to visit Montpellier (and Lyon), France several different times over the year. Here I am in 2005 when my sister, who took the photo, accompanied me on a return visit to Europe.
In Sept-Oct, 1973, I attended a 6-week course in French language studies at the Université Jean Moulin Language Institute in Lyon, France, in preparation for beginning a year-long academic stay at University of Montpellier from October 1973 to June 1974. This was the first time to travel outside my home country of the United States. Even though it was almost autumn, the local city pool situated on the banks of the Rhine River was still open. I remember going for an exhilarating September swim in that pool.
Dalewood Middle School
Middle School · Chattanooga, TN
In 1965 - 1966, I attended 7th grade at Dalewood Middle School (called Dalewood Junior High, at the time). I was in Mr. Carson's homeroom, and my best friend in grade 7 was Benjie Burrows, who was captain of the baseball team. I was a band member, playing the French horn, and also played viola in the orchestra (only 4 members, which included the Shapiro Brothers, who lived with their family in the Frank Lloyd Wright House there in Chattanooga. Benjie and I competed to be the best student, although we were good friends during that year. I never made the connection that Benjie's mom was from Korea, so he was a racially mixed child, growing into a teenager. I moved back to Kentucky the following year. Eventually, I was to marry a Japanese women and have two mixed genetic heritage sons, and four grandchildren who are of mixed American-Japanese heritage.
STORY: Just a short memory I recall about 7th grade: There was a school play going to be put on, and the day for try-outs for the play came. I walked down the long hallway toward the audition room, and next to me appeared Chip Bell, with whom I had been 2nd grade at Anna B. Lacey Elementary School five years earlier. We had also done a play in 2nd grade, and Chip had had a leading part. He asked if I were going to the try outs of the school play, which was where he was headed. Quickly, I responded that I was on my way home, turned around abruptly, and left school. I guess I felt that he was more experienced and would no doubt get the 'part', having no idea what play they were even putting on. Such are the foibles of childhood.
W.R. McNeill Elementary
Elementary school · Bowling Green
In 1963, I was a fifth grader at W.R. McNeill Elementary School, which was the year that John F. Kennedy was assassinated on Nov. 22, 1963. I remember that event very well, and recall how nearly the entire school was brought to tears by that news. Later that school year, our class put on a musical play and I recall having to learn how to square dance for our performance. My own siblings were also attending McNeill School, in grades 3 and 1, respectively, at the time.
The next school year in Grade 6, we attended a newly built elementary located much closer to our home on Morgantown Road in Bowling Green, called Dishman-McGinnis Elementary School. I attended the sixth grade there and then we moved to Chattanooga, Tenn., where I went to Dalewood Junior High (see separate entry), and then we returned to live in Bowling Green again for my eight-grade year. I went to L.C. Curry Elementary School (K - 8th grade) for the first half of the year, and then went again to Dishman-McGinnis Elementary School for the remainder of my eigth-grade year. See the attached 8th Grade Graduation Photo.
Here is my 8th Grade graduating class at Dishman McGinnis School in May, 1967. I'm in the very center of the photo.
Anna B Lacey School
School, Elementary
The year 2020 is the 60th anniversary of my 2nd grade year at Anna B. Lacey School located in Chattanooga, TN. Our class put on a play in front of the entire school, and every student played a part. I was the court page in red at the far right of the photo (See attached photo of the class play). I wonder if any of my classmates even remember that time. In fact, I'm pretty sure that at least one classmate remembers: It was Chip Bell, who played the Prince in our second grade play. He reminded me of that special event in our 2nd grade of elementary school when we were both student, new 7th graders at Dalewood Junior High School (now Dalewood Middle School). I retell the incident in Google Maps entry on here in this list (just above at Dalewood Middle School), and also on my Google Maps entry for that place.
Conservatoire Régional de Montpellier
Conservatory of music · Montpellier, France
When I was a junior in college at Western Kentucky University, I spent a year studying at University of Montpellier's Paul Valery College of Liberal Arts and LIterature. At that time, the city of Montpellier had a sister city relationship with Louisville, Kentucky. Consequently, I was awarded a 10-month scholarship to study viola with Professor Chene, who taught at the Conservatory of Montpellier. I had viola lessons with him every week from October until June that year. I have visited Montpellier several times since then and always stop by the Conservatory.
Dorchester Apartments
Apartment building · San Diego, CA
When I was a graduate student at SDSU, I rented a 2-bedroom apartment at Dorchester Apartments for the summer, so that my family could stay with me. We really enjoyed the apartment complex. Having a pool on the property was ideal for the boys and it was not very far from the campus. For two more summers after that (in all 1991-1993), I attended the summer school at San Diego State University to earn a second Master’s in Education Administration.
Byzantine Walls
Historical landmark
Walls of Constantinople was where my wife and I began our sojourn through much of Mediterranean Turkey at these Byzantine Walls. From this starting point, we had planned a two-week long trip along the Western coast of Turkey to (mainly) follow the visit made by the Apostle Paul to the Seven Churches of Asia Minor (present-day Turkey) in the first century. It is fitting that our sojourn began here at the Byzantine Walls. "The Walls of Constantinople are a series of defensive stone walls that have surrounded and protected the city of Constantinople (today Istanbul in Turkey) since its founding as the new capital of the Roman Empire by Constantine the Great. With numerous additions and modifications during their history, they were the last great fortification system of antiquity, and one of the most complex and elaborate systems ever built." (Credited to Bahman Amirzade, Google Local Guide)
Kohala Divers Ltd
Dive shop · Kawaihae, Waimea, Big Island
My friend, who lives in Kappa'u (near Hawi) on the Big Island, went diving with me a couple of times.
Kohala Divers is one of the best dive shops and scuba diving / snorkeling operators on the Big Island of Hawaii. I have been diving with Kohala Divers about a dozen times and have always had a great time with a friendly and knowledgeable dive master. In particular, I can recommend Kelli as she is extremely patient and very knowledgeable about the biological and oceanic life, as well as how to best enjoy the dive experience. The shop has a wide assortment of dive equipment and accessories, and at least once a year you can find great bargains on regular dive equipment during their sale of their older rental equipment to make room for new inventory. I don’t know about now, but in the past many of the dive masters here were women, which makes for a less aggressive, more nature-centered diving experience — in my opinion. They use a fairly large dive boat, which can handle at least four dive groups, based on level and dive experience.
Makaha Valley Plantation
Condominium complex · Waianae, Oahu (West shore)
When I bought a two-bedroom condo at Makaha Valley Plantation in 2002 just after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in NYC, I had no idea the condo would go up four times in value. I fixed up my unit myself, painting it entirely, and tiling the dining and kitchen floors. But as I could only use it on vacation once or twice a year, I did end up selling it. I decided to hunt for property on the Big Island and eventually built a small vacation home, which I sold in 2011. It was destroyed by the Kilauea Lava Flow of 2018, so I was glad no had sold it before the eruption.
Center for Liberal Arts/Kitasato University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
University department · Sagamihara, Japan
As a teacher in the English Language Department of Kitasato University for 24 years until 2020, I saw a lot of changes in the university’s buildings over the years. Of course, the most important elements in the life of a university are the students and teachers, of which I knew and taught thousands.
Books Kinokuniya Tokyo
Book store · Shibuya City, Tokyo, Japan
Japanese bookstore with large selection
Located on the sixth floor of the Nitori ( ) Home Furnishings Store, Kinokuniya Books is a book lover's delight. There are all types of books, magazines, and media (limited DVDs & Blueray disks, etc) available for browsing or purchase, including an extensive selection of English Language teaching materials, children's books, young adult's literature, and academic texts and research books / literature. Formerly, the entire building was a massive 6-floor bookstore run by Kinokuniya, but nowadays if you want to get books written in Nihongo, including manga in Japanese, you'll need to stop by the multi-storied main store, located not far away near the JR Shinjuku East Entrance, a roughly 700-m-walk from this Foreign Books only branch inside Nitori. If you arrive here at the street level entrance, then it will be fun to take one of two possible routes to return back towards Shinjuku JR Station. It's a kind of mini-tour side-trip that makes exploring a new and large city such a joy.
1) The first way back is to go up the stairs on the NW corner of the 6F store to reach the 7F sky walk over to the next building, which houses Takashimaya Department Store and just before that, Tokyu Hands, a multi-storied arts & crafts and eclectic utilitarian goods mega-store for every imaginable need. ( See my separate review elsewhere on Google Maps).
2) The second possible return trip begins by using the escalator inside the building and descending to the third floor of Nitori, which is actually a national chain franchise, stopping along the way to view the largest selections of home furnishings in Japan, and emerging on the 3F wooden-planked walkway that will carry you all the way back to Shinjuku Station, which is, by the way, the largest, busiest and most complex train station in the world.
--------------- PROFESSIONAL USE ---------------
Kinokuniya Books provides a professional academic, research and educational materials service (including K-12 and college textbooks) for its customers. It is possible to either order online or telephone, or to browse the shelves to find a specific book you want to buy. Then you can either purchase it yourself or have the book(s) shipped to your school or institution's office for later payment by your organization or university. Like me, many college faculty members have an annual research stipend or might have received a MEXT grant, The Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology Organization's grant-in-aid for research study, which will pay for texts and print materials for use in one's research efforts.
Jikei-in Temple
Pet cemetery · Fuchu
We went to the pet shrine and cemetery, called Jikeiin where our recently passed pet dog, Bati, is interred. He passed away in my wife’s arms on December 30, 2018. I was out of the country at the time, so it was my first time to see where he was laid to rest. Actually, his ashes will only be kept here for just three years. Then we’ll either bring his burial urn home or pour his ashes in a special place—probably the former will be best. Also memorialized here is my mother-in-law’s pet dog, Ichiro, (named after the Japanese star who played for the Seattle Mariners) who outlived her and came to live with us. Ichiro passed away at the age of twenty. He died about 4 years ago. Also buried at this shrine are the two rabbits, which were our sons’ pets for about 10 years before we had a dog. In the photo, Bati’s burial urn of cremated remains is kept on the second floor of a two-story building on the grounds of the shrine, located about a mile and a half from our house. It’s really just a 6 x 15 foot room, filled with shelves. Bati’s memorial niche is on the bottom row of this shelf of pet graves. It’s in one of several dozen of such crypt rooms. There are are also graves and mass burial sites - something for every budget and form of commemoration.
Sengenyama Park
Park · Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan
One of our favorite places in West Tokyo for a lovely walk in a forest preserve is also next to one of the largest cemeteries in Tokyo. One of the highlights of the park is the vista point to see Mount Fuji on the far west side of the park. Of course, it can be obscured by the clouds. There are trails and roads, where you can see a natural spring, and, in season, a rare lily-like yellow flower in May blooms on the hillside. There is a small shrine at the top of the 'mountain.' Sengenyama Park connects directly with Tamabochi Cemetery on the east side. There is a suspension bridge above the road that passes between the two, where you can cross to get from the cemetery to the park itself. The park is beautiful in all seasons as there are different flowers and wildlife that can be seen in each. I recommend going on to see the Tama Cemetery too, as there are many interesting monuments and the funeral and burial practices in Japan are quite unique.
Triolet University City
Student dormitory · Montpellier, France
Back in the day, October 1973-June 1974, when I was a foreign exchange student studying at the Paul Valery campus at the Universite de Montpellier, I lived for nine months at Cite Triolet dormitory and ate meals in the attached student cafeteria. It was a totally different experience from my 'normal' life back home in Kentucky, where I had lived with my family. Dormitory life was new, but something I enjoyed. I soon made friends with another American from the same university back home. We befriended Frankie and Patrice who were also students at Paul Valery University. On weekends, we usually watched TV at the dorm, never missing an episode of Kung Fu, the American TV drama starring David Carradine, and then got drunk on wine in my room and ended up wrestling in our underwear. I met Patrice, his wife and their two grown kids, when I visited Montpellier in March of 2018.
Enpukuji
Buddhist temple · Itabashi Ward, Nishidai, Tokyo
My wife’s family, including her parents, and many of her ancestors are interred at Enpukuji Temple, which is located within a short walking distance from her old family home in Nishidai. As she is the guardian of the family shrine, we go to the burial place two to four times a year at least. The autumnal and vernal equinoxes are the two mandatory days to visit the graves as well as the memorial dates of the passing of her mother and father. We usually clean the gravesite, place fresh flowers there, and light incense, then offer our prayers for good health and wise choices. I learned a few years ago that I will be buried in my wife’s family cemetery plot, as I have lived in her country of Japan for over 42 years. That fact somehow makes the trips to Enpukuji Temple there more meaningful.
NASA Mission Control Center
Museum of space history · Houston
Back in 1989, I had the opportunity to be one of 36 international educators who were selected to participate in the annual International Teacher's Space Camp held at the NASA Mission Control Center. For two weeks, we visited different divisions within NASA Mission Control, getting to do some of the same training exercises that real astronauts undergo, we heard talks from former and future astronauts and their preparation for space missions, and watched presentations by space scientists currently working on missions for NASA. It was a very rewarding experience for me as an international school teacher and as a person.
Pamukkale Belediyesi Kocaçukur Naturel Park Havuzu
Park · Pamukkale
Back when we went to Pamukkale, it was possible to spend a long time in different pools - both the natural ones and man-made ones. We met a young Turkish family at the bus station that offered us a couple of rooms in their home as a place to stay. The place was cheap enough, but the most interesting thing was the family cooked our dinner every night and more than that, the young woman who was the hostess showed my wife how all the dishes were made. Even today, we sometimes have home-made 'dolmas,' baklava, and other authentic Turkish dishes that she learned back then.
Hospital District De Djohong
Hospital · Djohong, Cameroon, West Africa
Thanks to the work of Phyllis Jansyn, who loved and volunteered many years of her life to the people of the village and area around Djohong, it was possible to construct this hospital and to staff it. When I visited Djohong in the early 2000s, the thing I remember was the early morning call-to-prayers by the imam at the mosque. Of course, there were prayers offered at various times during the day , but I can only recall the early morning ones.
Jekyll Island Oceanview Beach Park
Parking lot · Jekyll Island, (near Brunswick, Georgia)
Although I was born in Brunswick, my parents often used to come to Jekyll Island on my dad's day off from his work with hot air weather balloons at the Naval Air Station to spend their leisure time on the beach. I was only a newborn infant at the time. Years later, the three of us returned to this beach when I was over 50 years old to once again enjoy the experience and to reminisce about the 'good old days.'
El Cabron
Nature preserve · dive site: Gran Canaria, The Canary Islands, Spain
It may well be the best place for diving on the island of Gran Canaria, but I don't know about that since it the ONLY place I've dived (multiple times). I do know that there is quite a lot of sea life in these waters. It was great getting my PADI certification here and also getting Underwater Photographer PADI credential here. too, with the tutelage of the Davy Jones Dive School in Arinaga.
Parque Chichen-itza
Playground · Mérida, Yucatan (state), Mexico
At the time we visited Chichen-itza, I was teaching fourth grade in an international school, where the social studies curriculum dealt with the Maya Civilization. Therefore, I was delighted to get to visit the same sites that I had been teaching about in school. It was very hot that day, but we climbed several of the Mayan pyramids, walk on the ancient ball fields, and attempted to decipher the enigmatic face-like glyphs in the various monuments. Due to its proximity to the Yucatán, it was a perfect compliment to what we had seen at Tulum on the coast.
Fés
Train station : Fes, Morocco
It has been many years ago now that we were in Morocco. We arrived from Spain by crossing by ferry at the Strait of Gibraltar. After staying one night in Tangiers, we traveled by train to Fez. On board our train we met a Moroccan couple who were returning to their home in Fez with their infant son. We ended up making friends with them, so they invited us to have dinner at their home that evening. The next day we got took us to see the central marketplace.
Jekyll Island State Park
State park · Jekyll Island, (near Brunswick, Georiga), USA
Island retreat for leisure & fitness
Of course, Jekyll Island State Park means a lot to me. Besides being a wonderful place to spend your free time with friends and family, it was near where I was actually born.
Wright Brothers National Memorial
Memorial park · Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina
Iconic plane take-off spot with exhibits
It's been a long time ago now since 1977 since we took my wife's parents (they were Japanese who were living in Tokyo) on a grand tour of the Eastern United States, and the Wright Brothers National Monument at Kitty Hawk was one thing they wanted to see.
Empire State Building
Tourist attraction · New York City, Manhattan Island, NY
The Empire State Building is a 103-story landmark skyscraper with observatories was for the longest time the tallest building in the world. Located in the heart of Manhattan Island, New York City, it is still a noteworthy edifice that is visited by millions of sightseers from around the globe.
I first climbed to the top of the Empire State Building in 1973 when I was departing New York's JFK Airport to spend a year studying in Montpellier, France -- one of those Junior-Year-Abroad study excursions. The next time was in 1977 after I married my wife of 42 years. Her parents were visiting from Tokyo and we made a driving tour of the Eastern United States, and of course, stopped in New York City and went to the top of the Empire. I think the third time was in 1999 when I convinced by parents to fly to New York to meet up with me and my older son, who was studying in Cambridge, Mass. at the time. We were both attending and presenting at the TESOL conference held in New York in March of that year. I can't remember the details of the fourth time I visited it, but it was on a solitary trip to NYC in second decade of the 2000s. Over the decades I’ve seen the New York skyline undergo slow and steady changes, but it always remains one of the world’s great metropolises and a spectacle to behold from the zenith that the Empire State Building offers.
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
$$$$ · Performing arts theater · New York City, New York
I have performed on stage in Tokyo several times as a stage extra with the Metropolitan Opera, who used to bring an elaborate entourage on tour to Tokyo. While normally you need ticket for a performance at Metropolitan Opera or New York City Ballet at the Lincoln Center in New York , you don’t need a ticket to visit the Metropolitan Opera Gift Shop. At times, you can find great bargains on special gifts, music CDs, books, and surprising fashion items, such as dresses, handbags, wraps, and evening wear. So you don’t have to even attend one of their world-class performances to enjoy your time at the Met. If you are so inclined, you’ll be completely amazed by the opulence of the theater itself. I’ve attended opera performances they were absolute stunningly staged musical and dramatic works.
Cumberland Mountain State Park
State park
Lakefront recreation area & golf course
It has been many many years since we've been to Cumberland Mountain State Park. But I do have a childhood memory of a family incident that happened there. Our parents took us to Cumberland Mountain State Park one weekend on our way to Chattanooga, where we used to live. Mom and the three children climbed up into the woods and, for some reason, Dad was not with us. All of sudden, we heard a animal cry like a lynx or a mountain lion, so the four of us hurtled down the hill, back toward the car, running as fast we could. When we reached the car, there was our Dad, laughing his head off, for it had been him who was making the animal noises. My mother was furious because she had been scared so bad that she had peed in her pants. We all used to recall with humor and alacrity that story of Cumberland Mountain State Park. We never went back to visit, by the way.
Gaidos Seafood Restaurant
$$$ · Seafood · Galveston
Longtime upscale restaurant with views
It has been a long while ago now that we ate at Gaido's Seafood Restaurant. Our friends, with whom I had worked as a co-teacher in Japan. Ann Doumas was the junior high science teacher at Nishimachi International School where I was also a teacher (1979 -1990), The Doumas’ had moved back to Galveston some time before. When we visited them a few years ago, they insisted on taking us out to eat dinner at Gaido's Seafood. It was fantastic food - there is no question about that.
Harvard Graduate School Of Education
University · Cambridge (outside Boston, MASS), USA
When our older son, Mikio, graduated from The Harvard Graduate School of Education, he was the youngest person in his class. At that same time, Seiji Ozawa, the renowned conductor, received an honorary doctorate from Harvard University.
Glasgow Cemetery
Cemetery : Glasgow, Kentucky
My mother, Rebecca Florence (Lewis) Brooks was visiting her husband's grave along with her sister-in-law, Susan, at the Glasgow Cemetery.
My father was born in Glasgow, so it's appropriate that he and my mother were buried there upon their deaths. They had met in high school at the nearby Cave City’s Caverna High School, and lived just a block away from each other during that time. My father's funeral was held on August 14, 2012. Many members of his family, as well as family friends, were present at the funeral and at this cemetery for his burial that day. My mother passed on Nov 27, 2017, and was buried there on Dec 3, 2017 in the Brooks family burial plot alongside my father. Unfortunately, I was not able to attend my mother's funeral as I live in Tokyo, and had job commitments at the time. In fact, the last time to see my mother was from March 13-20, 2017. I have not been able to visit Glasgow Cemetery since I was there with my mother while visiting her at her former home in Bowling Green, KY the year before that in 2016.
The photos were mostly taken at Glasgow Cemetery immediately following my dad’s funeral and during his burial after the ceremony in August 2012. They include pictures of my mom, my aunt (by Dad's younger sister), and the pallbearers, including my own son, and his cousins. Incidentally, my father's parents, Arthur Leroy Brooks and (Dorothy) Jeannette Conklin Brooks are also buried in another burial plot at the same Glasgow Cemetery.
I plan on being buried in my wife’s family burial plot at Empukuji Temple, where nearly 16 generations (nearly 300 years) of the Yamaguchi Family are interred. The gravesite is located directly behind the Empukuji Temple in Tokyo’s Itabashi Ward near my wife’s former family home, where we lived for 12 years until we moved to Fuchu City (West Tokyo), and is the actual place she was born and the temple is where we both will be buried in the same plot as her father and mother. As is Japanese custom, the person’s ashes are placed in the grave exactly 49 days after being kept at home in the family altar.
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Rocío Molina
https://www.unadonnalgiorno.it/rocio-molina/
Bevo flamenco ma lotto per la mia libertà e per non avere pregiudizi.
Rocío Molina, ballerina e coreografa spagnola che ha vinto il Leone d’Argento alla Biennale di Venezia 2022.
Ha reinventato il flamenco abbracciando l’avanguardia senza snaturarlo. Spinge i suoi confini nella contemporaneità della danza, sperimentando nuovi limiti. Il suo virtuosismo tecnico e la ricerca nascono da una libertà creativa audace, rischiosa, radicale, da un pensiero in movimento mosso da improvvisazioni ed esplorazioni del corpo e della mente che uniscono e attingono a diverse discipline e a mondi culturali che richiamano letteratura, cinema, pittura, filosofia.
Nata a Malaga nel 1984, a tre anni già ballava e a sette componeva le sue prime coreografie. Diplomatasi con lode al Real Conservatorio de Danza di Madrid è subito entrata nei cast di compagnie professionali che facevano tournée internazionali.
A 22 anni ha debuttato col suo primo lavoro Entre paredes segnando l’inizio di una serie di creazioni che hanno come comune denominatore il suo approccio curioso e trasgressivo sul flamenco che oltrepassa i sentieri battuti precedentemente dalla storica danza.
Aveva 26 anni quando il Ministero della Cultura spagnolo le ha conferito il Premio Nazionale per la Danza per “il suo contributo al rinnovamento del flamenco e per la sua versatilità e forza di interprete capace di gestire i registri più diversi con libertà e coraggio”.
Dopo la sua interpretazione di Oro Viejo al New York City Center, Mikhail Baryshnikov si è inginocchiato davanti a lei sulla porta del suo camerino.
È la danzatrice spagnola che ha ottenuto maggiori riconoscimenti internazionali. I suoi lavori sono stati rappresentati in teatri e festival in tutto il mondo, Avignone, Londra, New York, Singapore, Berlino, Seoul, Mosca, Taiwan, Oslo, Stoccolma, Montreal, Tokyo e altri ancora.
Ha lavorato con importanti rappresentanti del flamenco e con figure di spicco dell’arte contemporanea.
Ha ricevuto una marea di premi internazionali e critiche entusiaste dalle più importante testate mondiali. Fra i riconoscimenti ricevuti ci sono: il Premio Nazionale Spagnolo per la Danza, il Premio Miglior Ballerina alla Biennale di Siviglia, la Medaglia d’oro della Provincia di Malaga, il Max Award nel 2015 e 2017 e il Dance National British Award nel 2016.
Nel 2022, oltre alla Medaglia d’Oro al Merito nelle Belle Arti del Ministero dello Sport e della Cultura spagnolo, è stata insignita del Leone d’argento 2022 per la danza della Biennale di Venezia con la motivazione: “Le coreografie di Rocío Molina, avant-guarde, singolari e di una potenza innata, fondono il flamenco tradizionale con gli stili della danza moderna e impulsos – improvvisazioni che caratterizzano il suo alfabeto coreutico. Radicalmente libera, intreccia un dialogo tra il XXI secolo e il passato per inventare un nuovo futuro della forma – rivolgendosi direttamente al presente in termini autentici ed evocativi. Sembra divorare il libro delle ‘regole’ classiche per costruire i propri volumi, ispirandoci e sollecitando un nuovo sguardo, un nuovo sentire”.
Il suo è un corpo in continua trasformazione, capace di una metamorfosi fisica e visuale che apre a un immaginario visionario, bizzarro, carnale, che intreccia arte e vita, sacro e profano, tradizione e modernità.
È una forza con cui fare i conti, nell’arte e nella vita.
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Mikhail Baryshnikov Details 75th Birthday Concert With Laurie Anderson, Regina Spektor
Choreographer, dancer, and noted Sex and the City guest star Mikhail Baryshnikov will celebrate his 75th birthday with a grand celebration hosted by the Baryshnikov Arts Center. The event, scheduled for June 25 at Kaatsbaan Cultural Park in Tivoli, New York, will feature special appearances from musicians Laurie Anderson, Diana Krall, Regina Spektor, and Kaoru Watanabe. “I consider several of…
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Baryshnikov Arts Center announces New York Premiere of Miguel Gutierrez’s "I as another"
Baryshnikov Arts Center (BAC) announces the New York premiere of Miguel Gutierrez’s I as another (2022) on May 4-7, 2023 at BAC’s Jerome Roberts Theater, 450 W. 37th Street, NYC. Tickets are $25 and are available at bacnyc.org/performances/performance/miguel-gutierrez. I as another is Miguel Gutierrez’s newest work, a duet performed with Laila Franklin. The piece takes place in a future/present…
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Moby Dick musical workshop cast: Nick Choksi
Nick Choksi played Daggoo, a harpooner, in the Part I Baryshnikov Arts Center workshop. He returned for the full Public Theater workshop, though I don’t believe he reprised the same role.
Nick was a part of the Ars Nova, Kazino, A.R.T and Broadway runs of Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812, in which he played Fedya Dolokhov.
He is a stage and screen actor, illustrator, animator, musician and singer-songwriter. Here is a video of an original song of his, God Song, from an upcoming work, performed with Brittain Ashford, Anais Mitchell, and Moby Dick workshop castmate Dawn Troupe:
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And here is a video of him with Comet castmate Andrew Mayer, performing No Widow from the play A Food Odyssey - which he both wrote the music for and played Odysseus in:
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#moby dick#mobydick#moby dick musical#nick choksi#dave malloy#daggoo#baryshnikov arts center workshop#the public theater workshop#dawn troupe#brittain ashford#anais mitchell#andrew mayer#gif#video#mdcast#my post
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Adam Tendler at the piano, with dancers Matthew Johnson and Bebe Miller
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Dr. William Hamilton, former attending orthopedic surgeon for the New York City Ballet, died on March 29. He was 90 years old.
The following is the obituary published in the New York Times, by Clay Risen:
Dr. William G. Hamilton, who as the attending orthopedic surgeon for New York City Ballet spent more than 40 years fixing bone spurs, tendinitis, bursitis, torn ligaments and what he called “the Nutcracker Fracture,” died on March 29 at his home in Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y. He was 90.
His wife, Linda Hamilton, said the cause was congestive heart failure.
Ballet dancers may be the “athletes of God,” as Albert Einstein supposedly said. But until Dr. Hamilton came along, they were treated more like ethereal beings than physical bodies that could crack, tear and otherwise fall apart under the extreme and often unnatural pressures of repeated pliés and grand jetés.
In fact, it was George Balanchine, the choreographer who famously insisted that his dancers stoically work through their stubbed toes and sprained ankles, who asked Dr. Hamilton to become the first in-house doctor for the 80-plus members of New York City Ballet, in 1972.
Dr. Hamilton immediately said yes, though he knew nothing about ballet. He immersed himself in the art, attending weekend classes and becoming close to Balanchine and, later, the dancer and choreographer Mikhail Baryshnikov, who in 1980 hired him to be the attending surgeon for American Ballet Theater as well.
A courtly 6-foot-3 Southerner, Dr. Hamilton became a favorite and even revered figure around Lincoln Center. He had a disarming bedside manner that put young dancers at ease when they came to him worried that a sprained ankle might end their career.
He kept a ballet barre in his examining room, and he was renowned for catching early signs of chronic, potentially debilitating problems just by asking a dancer to go through a few routine motions.
Early on, he realized that while dancers suffered the same kinds of injuries athletes did, they got them in obscure ways and places. He saw, for example, that the rapid movements required by Balanchine’s ballets came with the risk of foot and ankle injury, while the leaps and bounds more common under Mr. Baryshnikov were more threatening to the hips and knees.
“From the very beginning, I learned that although they get the same injuries as athletes, dancers are artists first,” he told Dance Magazine in 2011.
When Dr. Hamilton started out, in the early 1970s, there was no such thing as dance medicine, and indeed foot and ankle injuries were a largely understudied field of orthopedic medicine.
He built up both fields through lectures and journal articles in which he diagnosed previously understudied injuries; he was among the first to describe the Nutcracker Fracture, for example, which involves multiple breaks in the cuboid bone in the foot. He was president of the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society from 1992 to 1993, and today every sizable dance company in the country has an orthopedic surgeon on call.
“Bill was the king of orthopedic dance medicine,” Glenn Pfeffer, the co-director of the Cedars-Sinai/USC Glorya Kaufman Dance Medicine Center in Los Angeles, said in a phone interview.
Dr. Hamilton continued to perform surgery until he was 81 and consulted until a few years ago, long after most physicians would have hung up their scalpels.
“I would have retired a long time ago if it wasn’t for the dancers,” he said in a 2016 interview with the magazine Princeton Alumni Weekly. “It’s very rewarding because they love what they do. They just want to dance; they wouldn’t want to do anything else.”
William Garnett Hamilton did not set out to be a Manhattan doctor, let alone a balletomane. He was born on Jan. 11, 1932, in Altus, Okla., where his father, Milton Hamilton, was a salesman and his mother, Elizabeth (Garnett) Hamilton, was a homemaker.
The family moved to Shreveport, La., when he was very young. After his parents divorced, his mother remarried and moved to Portage, Wis., where her new husband owned a plastics manufacturing company.
William graduated from Princeton in 1954 with a degree in engineering, and after two years in the Army he joined his stepfather’s business in Wisconsin. He married and had a child; by his mid-20s, he said, he could see his entire life unfolding before him. He didn’t like what he saw.
Against his parents’ wishes that he stay to run the family company, he applied to medical school. He was accepted at Columbia, one of the few schools that took older students (he was 28 when he enrolled). He decided to focus on orthopedics—a field that he said was not unlike engineering, with muscles and joints standing in for ropes and levers. He graduated in 1964 and, after several years of residency, opened a practice in Midtown Manhattan in 1969.
In addition to his work with the two ballet companies, he provided the same services to the companies’ affiliated schools, the School of American Ballet and the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School, and he consulted for numerous Broadway shows and New York sports teams, including the Knicks and the Yankees.
His first two marriages ended in divorce. He met his future third wife, Linda Homek, when she was a dancer with New York City Ballet. She later received a doctorate in psychology from Adelphi University, on Long Island. In 2000, she and Dr. Hamilton created a multidisciplinary wellness team, including a dietitian and a massage therapist, to care for the company’s dancers, a model that has since been adopted by other ballet companies.
Along with his wife, Dr. Hamilton is survived by his sister, Ann Kirk; his sons, William Jr. and Lewis; and three grandchildren.
Photo: Dr. Hamilton in his office in 2013, by Paul Kolnik via the NY Times
#Dr. William Hamilton#orthopedist#orthopedic surgeon#dance injuries#NYCB#New York City Ballet#ballet#Nutcracker fracture#orthopedics
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Fort Blossom revisited (2000/2012) from John Jasperse on Vimeo.
Fort Blossom revisited (2000/2012)
Choreography and Visual Design by John Jasperse
Performers: Ben Asriel, Lindsay Clark, Erika Hand, and Burr Johnson
Lighting Design: Stan Pressner
Music: Ryoji Ikeda*
From +/- (1996), Released in October 1996 by Touch I TO:30
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and
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From 0°C (1998)
C0:: coda (for T.F.)
From 1000 Fragments (1995) Originally released in Feb. 1995 by cci recordings I CCD23001 Re-released in Feb. 2008 by Raster-Noton I R-N089
Luxus 1-3
*The music for Fort Blossom revisited (2000/2012) is compiled from publicly released recordings by Ryoji Ikeda and is used by gracious permission of the composer. Please note that the music was not commissioned for this performance.
Additional Music by: Fantastic Plastic Machine with Calin – Samba de Minha Namoradinho
Lighting Director and Production Supervisor: James Clotfelter
Touring Staff: 7 persons (1 artistic director, 4 dancers, 1 tour manager & 1 technician)
Fort Blossom (2000)
Original Roles created by Miguel Gutierrez, Parker Lutz, Juliette Mapp and John Jasperse
Original Lighting Design: Stan Pressner
Original Sound Mix: Michael Floyd
Original Costume Construction: Deanna Berg
Description:
Fort Blossom, choreographed and designed by Jasperse, is a 40-minute work that premiered in 2000 at The Kitchen with original performers Miguel Gutierrez, John Jasperse, Parker Lutz, and Juliette Mapp. The work has been revisited and expanded into a 60-minute work for four new performers, Ben Asriel, Lindsay Clark, Erika Hand, and Burr Johnson. Fort Blossom revisited (2000/2012) is a personal look at the body (alternately medical, eroticized and/or aestheticized). The audience is invited to examine contemporary notions of how we experience the body as both owners and spectators.
"I would like to express my deepest gratitude, both to the original performers with whom I created Fort Blossom in 2000 and to the current performers who have recreated, revised and expanded these roles. I am deeply indebted to all of them for their creative contributions, their artistry, their generosity of spirit, and their trust. This project was a lovely moment of discovery in 2000 and has been an equally lovely re-discovery for me personally. In returning to it 12 years later, it has felt just as exciting and engaging as it originally did, perhaps even more so." – John Jasperse
Performances:
February 24-26, 2012 Premiere Bryn Mawr College Performing Arts Series, Bryn Mawr, PA
May 9-12, 2012 New York Live Arts, NYC
June 15-16, 2012 The Flynn Center for the Performing Arts, Burlington, VT
Project Funders:
This presentation of Fort Blossom revisited (2000/2012) is made possible, in part, by the National Endowment for the Arts and contributors to the DTW Commissioning Fund at New York Live Arts.
Fort Blossom revisited (2000/2012) is reconstructed with lead support from Bryn Mawr College, funded by The Pew of Center for Arts & Heritage through Dance Advance.
Fort Blossom revisited (2000/2012) was developed in residencies at Baryshnikov Art Center and Bryn Mawr College, and in rehearsals at CPR – Center for Performance Research.
The creation of Fort Blossom (2000) was made possible, in part, with funds from The Jerome Foundation of St. Paul, MN, The Greenwall Foundation, the Heathcote Art Foundation, and the Danspace Project’s 1999-2000 Commissioning Initiative (as part of the International Dancemakers’ Lab) with support from the Joyce Mertz-Gilmore Foundation. The premiere performances at The Kitchen in 2000 were made possible with funds from the Harkness Foundation for Dance and the James E. Robison Foundation.
Thin Man Dance, Inc. is supported, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council; New York State Council on the Arts; and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Video: New York Live Arts (May 9-12, 2012)
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Eliot Feld performing in “Tzaddik,” photo Gjon Mili.
“Tzaddik” is a work of modern ballet by Jewish-American choreographer Eliot Feld. Feld, who made an enormous number of ballets for his own companies, ABT, the Joffrey Ballet, NYCB, the Juilliard School, and others, made two minor works that dealt explicitly with Jewish themes, both in 1974: “Sephardic Song” and “Tzaddik.”
Feld frequently incorporated folk elements from various traditions into his choreography: “Feld uses popular or folk dance motifs in his choreography the way Copland has used to folk tunes in his scores - not just as a springboard and reference point, but as accent and seasoning for his own dance language” (Kriegsman 1978, see Further Reading). However, Jewish folk dance appeared in only these two short works.
Set to a score by Jewish-American composer Aaron Copland, “Tzaddik” is performed in front of a set incorporating Hebrew text by Boris Aronson, himself a leading Jewish-American scenic designer who worked alongside his wife Lisa Jalowetz on Broadway (including for Fiddler on the Roof) and in the Yiddish theater world, and also designed the sets for Baryshnikov’s Nutcracker.
“Tzaddik,” though plotless, is explicitly about (Ashkenazi-Hasidic) Jewish rituals and religious practice. Dedicated to Feld’s grandmother, it draws upon Hasidic aesthetics and movement and centers on the eponymous tzaddik, or holy scholar at the center of a Hasidic community. The tzaddik dances to teach his two disciples, who echo his movements. Feld himself apparently danced the leading role, which required “intensity” and “romantic gusto” (Barnes 1974, NYT).
The Eliot Feld Video Archive preserves some footage of “Tzaddik” filmed in 1975, which may be viewed in person at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center.
Further reading: Feld Video Archive, the Eliot Feld Ballet’s current iteration, American Jewish Biographies entry from 1982, 1974 NYT review, another, much longer 1974 NYT review. 1978 Washington Post review. (Please note that the reviews contain racism and antisemitism of the microaggression variety.)
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