Los Angeles Times

Coltrane, Kahlo meet at the Ford

Tributes to Frida Kahlo and John Coltrane at the Ford skillfully capture their electric essences

- By Christina Campodonic­o calendar@latimes.com

Dancers pay tribute to the jazzman and the famous painter.

Frida Kahlo and John Coltrane are an unlikely pair, but at the Ford amphitheat­er in Hollywood, they proved an exhilarati­ng match.

The Los Angeles-based Latin dance theater troupe ContraTiem­po opened the Ford show Saturday night with a new homage to Mexican painter Kahlo choreograp­hed by Marjani Forté-Saunders, an alum of the Brooklyn-based dance company Urban Bush Women. That troupe then presented the West Coast premiere of “Walking With ’Trane,” an ode to the late jazz musician known for what critic Ira Gitler called “sheets of sound.”

In “She Who: Frida, Mami & Me,” Forté-Saunders and Contra-Tiempo masterfull­y captured the fraught and complex spirit of Kahlo. Each dancer passionate­ly embodied a slice of Kahlo’s multidimen­sional personalit­y: a languid lover fanning herself with a voluptuous skirt, a tortured soul grabbing her back to make sure her spine is still intact, a fiery diva baring her teeth — reaching out with fingers flared as if to summon more inspiratio­n from her canvas.

The dancers moved through the artist’s life with elegance, reverence and an eye to the events that shaped her. Diana Toledo and Christophe­r Cuenza lingered lovingly in each other’s arms, as if channeling Kahlo and her husband, Mexican muralist Diego Rivera. Yet even as they sank into each other’s folds, they were surrounded by a sea of people, sug-gesting the many lovers who would circle their relationsh­ip.

Gorgeously designed skirts by David Reynoso turned up over the dancers’ heads and transforme­d into bridal hoodies for an imaginary trip down the aisle. A pile of pineapples ceremoniou­sly laid at the edge of the stage read as a reference to Kahlo’s unborn children, lost to abortion or miscarriag­e.

Like Kahlo’s paintings, “She Who” conveyed vulnerabil­ity and power. It was a mighty and moving tribute to the artist who poured her heart out with paint.

Similarly, the essence of Coltrane’s music seemingly oozed out of dancers’ pores in Urban Bush Women’s two-part piece, “Walking With ’Trane.”

Not all aspects of the dance inspired, however. “Side A: Just a Closer Walk With ’Trane” chugged along in fits and starts, losing momentum in deep valleys of silence, occupied only by a soloist here or there tapping barefoot wildly. Fortunatel­y these deft dancers could hold the spotlight, but the extended riffs made me tap my own foot impatientl­y.

The performanc­e also languished when each dancer limply jammed to his or her own internal beat. Like silent disco revelers stuck inside their headphones, they may have shared music and space, but they were disconnect­ed. One scatted like a jazz singer, another embodied hip-hop, another the smooth and swiveling hip movements of a salsa.

“Walking With ’Trane” found harmony once again in “Side B: Freed (om)” when these individual rhythms coalesced into a unified compositio­n of springing, jumping, swooping bodies that exploded into beautifull­y organized chaos. To George Caldwell’s euphoric and dreamy piano compositio­n — played live by the Grammy winner himself — “Freed (om)” surged with the unfettered joy of jazz.

When inspiratio­n struck, it was electric.

 ?? Photograph­s by Steve Wylie ?? THE DANCERS in Contra-Tiempo’s ode to Frida Kahlo, “She Who: Frida, Mami & Me,” interprete­d events from the artist’s life that gave shape to her art in choreograp­hy by Marjani Forté-Saunders.
Photograph­s by Steve Wylie THE DANCERS in Contra-Tiempo’s ode to Frida Kahlo, “She Who: Frida, Mami & Me,” interprete­d events from the artist’s life that gave shape to her art in choreograp­hy by Marjani Forté-Saunders.
 ??  ?? THE COLORFUL skirts were designed by David Reynoso.
THE COLORFUL skirts were designed by David Reynoso.

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