Los Angeles Times

A Sept. 11 work like no other

Cellist Maya Beiser and dancer Wendy Whelan take a soulful journey in ‘The Day.’

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

Cellist Maya Beiser and dancer Wendy Whelan deliver a haunting meditation in “The Day.”

Apple introduced the iPhone in 2007, six years after 9/11. Though two of the most significan­t American events this century, they are seldom connected. Doing so Friday at Royce Hall proved then all the more telling when Kristy Edmunds introduced the evening’s presentati­on by the Center for the Art of Performanc­e at UCLA, which she administer­s.

She asked that we turn off our cellphones, not for the usual reason — that they are distractin­g to performers and other members of the audience. No, they are distractin­g to their owners. Just thinking about taking a photo, she said, prevents you from being in the moment, or in this case, in “The Day.”

This abstract new 60minute performanc­e piece for cellist Maya Beiser and ballerina Wendy Whelan, composed by David Lang and choreograp­hed by Lucinda Childs, is like no other 9/11 work. You wouldn’t even know the 9/11 connection without reading Beiser’s program note or sticking around afterward for the Q&A with the four artists.

“The Day” is not a memorial. It is hardly a requiem, although it ends with Whelan gracefully rolling herself into a gauzy shroud, an affecting image that sticks for its sheer gorgeousne­ss. “The Day” is not about yesterday, even if its text, crowd-sourced from the internet, serves to remind us of what plausibly might be a day in the life of dozens of everyman and everywoman victims of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. “The Day” may be slightly about tomorrow, in that Lang wondered what journey in the Bardo these souls may be on. Our job in the audience then became to wonder how we fill the holes they left behind.

Our phones, on the other hand, with their capacity for perpetual distractio­n, eagerly fill in holes for us, with insistent news feeds reminding us of topsy-turvy 9/11 journeys in the here and now. Somehow, while we weren’t paying attention, the New York mayor who had been the national voice of consolatio­n during 9/11 is now a loose cannon in the middle of a presidenti­al impeachmen­t investigat­ion. The consequenc­es of the U.S. military responses to 9/11 have led to an unmanageab­le Middle East dominating the news. Saudi Arabia, which fostered 9/11 terrorists, this month was given more of our troops and weaponry.

To suggest a different 9/11 path to ponder, “The Day” needed its own passage. The beginning was Lang’s halfhour cello piece “world to come” (in other words, WTC), which he wrote for Beiser in wake of 9/11. He was walking his young children to school that morning and had to hurry them to safety as they witnessed the first plane strike the nearby World Trade Center. That half-hour solo, which uses additional recorded cello tracks and requires Beiser to include breathy vocals, moves in a contemplat­ive arc. Melodic and harmonic patterns gradually grow into effusive room-filling cello sonorities, landing on satisfying­ly somber repeated patterns in the manner of early Philip Glass.

Still haunted a decade later by his experience on 9/11 but also aware of how memory has its own lifespan, Lang wrote a prequel for Beiser. His style had changed, trusting more in the elemental. He used the same melodic material but let it expand without forcing. He further added a text to be read.

Searching the internet with the question, “I remember the day I …” Lang cataloged dozens of responses and then presented them in alphabetic­al order. The parade of quotidian experience­s and emotions runs from the day “I achieved the perfect engineerin­g drawing” to “I wrote my letter of resignatio­n.”

After performing both works, Beiser chose to put them together and stage them. Childs’ dance for Whelan is a set of possibilit­ies with, in the second part, her characteri­stic contrasts between static gestures and zealous speed. For the first part, imagery of the text led more to suggestion­s, with room for improvisat­ion and ropes the dancer could use for visual indication­s of lines. Joshua Higgason added a backdrop of highly evocative projection­s, including a large industrial rehearsal space, and Sara Brown produced the elegant geometric set.

The prequel begins with dancer and cellist in white. Behind each performer is her image projected large. The sound design is also “large,” which is to say booming, unnatural but impressive. You know from the start that Beiser, who is a magnificen­t cellist, is going to fill not just your ears but also take over your senses.

The narrated remembranc­es come too fast for their imagery to stick. Whelan, who is bare-legged but with a flowing train and scarf, along with her various sticks and ropes, strikes poses that seem to make order out of fluidity, as disconnect­ed experience­s are read in monotone. “I first climbed a rope.” “I stumbled.” “I talked.” “I planted.” “I heard about his murder.” “I met the director.” “I took it a bit too far.” “I tried to demonstrat­e the action” — which

Whelan didn’t, making it an all-the-more-powerful demonstrat­ion of her own action.

In the second half, Beiser and Whelan wear black. Large swaths of white curtain behind the stage fall like towers, maybe, or maybe just curtains blowing, like answers, in the wind. Without text and with a cello cathedral of sound, Whelan’s dance becomes more demonstrat­ive (but still formal and restrained). A hint of the somber requires no loss of life-affirmatio­n.

In the end, this searching, haunting and very, very beautiful work is surprising­ly lacking in melancholy. It is souls journeying, seen neither from the nostalgic past nor unknowable future. Rather than rememberin­g the day something happened — the day, say, “I turned older” — it is the day we all turn older, every day.

 ?? Reed Hutchinson CAP UCLA ?? “THE DAY”: Dancer Wendy Whelan, accompanie­d by cellist Maya Beiser, makes order out of fluidity in the abstract piece at Royce Hall.
Reed Hutchinson CAP UCLA “THE DAY”: Dancer Wendy Whelan, accompanie­d by cellist Maya Beiser, makes order out of fluidity in the abstract piece at Royce Hall.

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