The Star Early Edition

The power of dance

SA AUDIENCES CAN EXPECT TO SEE SOME UNFORGETTA­BLE PERFORMANC­ES FROM THE ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER

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FNB JOBURGARTF­AIR BRINGS AFRICAN WORKS CLOSER TO ART LOVERS AND COLLECTORS

ALVIN Ailey’s vision for his contempora­ry dance company as a repertory company meant they reached far and wide for choreograp­hers. This is still what drives the current (and only third ) artistic director, Robert Battle, following the legendary Ailey himself and then the iconic Judith Jamison.

“It’s always about opportunit­y and keeps us in the past, present and future,” he says as a prelude to their South African tour that starts at Joburg’s Teatro on September 3 and runs for 13 performanc­es. They then move to Cape Town’s Artscape for six performanc­es, opening on September 16.

In the job for four years, he has embraced the Ailey ethos from the start. His first experience of Ailey’s revelatory Revelation­s, which is part of every performanc­e in South Afirca, is what first turned his heart and head to dance. “My whole world was illuminate­d when I saw

Revelation­s,” he says and believes seeing this Ailey heartbeat experience is as important as knowing who Dr Martin Luther King is. “People who looked like me, danced a history I knew.”

It’s also about inclusivit­y and the goal pushed by Ailey that great art should be a universal experience. “Before outreach was such a huge thing, he was out there taking dance to especially those without opportunit­y,” says Battle who is excited about the developmen­t challenges they are up for in South Africa.

“He knew that we should step off the stage because it was all about extending art and education to young people who should experience this transforma­tive thing. Everybody should have access.”

That is what their most iconic dance choreograp­hed by Ailey, Revelation­s, is about. Ailey understood that everyone would connect to the spirituali­ty of the piece and find their own. “He is holding a mirror to society to show them how beautiful everyone is and emphasisin­g that we’re all more alike than not.”

These are the traditions that Batte is expanding on and confesses that he is simply “standing on their shoulders”.

Staying with the ethos of the company, one of his most precious tasks is to take them forward by making connection­s and exploring

together,” relationsh­ips. and “It’s he’s about speaking bringingin a dance people rather than a most exciting, romantic but sense,also importanth­e notes. It’s tasks one to of findhis those connection­s that will work on stage. "It’s like matchmakin­g,” he says and he loves the process of making that happen and then witnessing the results.

It’s what defines a company not only for audiences, but also for those participat­ing, like the dancers.

“I’ve thrown different things at them which challenges them, keeps them on their toes,” he says.

And the things that caught him unawares, but also inspired him as artistic director, were welcoming new dancers into the company. “It wasn’t something I had thought about until it happened the first time,” he explains. “That moment of telling someone their audition had been successful, the emotion that goes with that for specific individual­s took me back to when I was standing there,” he says. or him it was like going back to his youth. If I can stay in touch with that young self… that's what it takes.” It’s what this company is about and we will see that in their dance, one of which is a choreograp­hed work by Battle, Takademe. When you hear the unsual music, you won’t easily forget. "I was given this piece of music which was The vocalised syllables of a Sheila Chandra syncopated score,” he says.

It so excited him that he started choreograp­hing, but in a very tiny space, a lounge of a flat. “It meant that the first solo of the work doesn’t allow the dance to travel,” he says. And now he’s amused that his position allows it to travel the world! It started so small.

The influences are strongly Indian and he thinks back to his days at Juliard when he used to peek in at the Indian dance class: “I was fascinated by the hand, feet and head movements.” Watching Takademe today, he can also see the influence of his early Michael Jackson admiration, which again shows the importance of exposure on any level.

This is Battle’s first visit to South Africa and he’s excited. This is what the Alvin Ailey company represents for him. “We have been named ‘world ambassador­s’,” he says.

He also underlines that his driving force has always been the following: “I am a human being and nothing human can be alien to me.”

It’s his ethos, the one he lives by and the one that infuses his company.

 ??  ?? Artistic Director Robert Battle.
Artistic Director Robert Battle.
 ?? PICTURE: ANDREW ECCLES ??
PICTURE: ANDREW ECCLES
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 ?? PICTURES: ANDREW ECCLES ?? Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s Linda Celeste Sims and Yannick Lebrun.
PICTURES: ANDREW ECCLES Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s Linda Celeste Sims and Yannick Lebrun.
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