The Georgia Straight

Ellis and Margolick cherish women who shaped them

- By Charlie Smith

Over the course of the pandemic, Vancouver-raised and New York–based dancer Rebecca Margolick has been reflecting on the role of performing artists in responding to the world’s most pressing challenges.

“I think, as artists, we have a responsibi­lity to, first and foremost, be good citizens,” she tells the Straight by phone.

So when the pandemic cancelled many live performanc­es, she began advocating for the rights of freelance dancers.

“It forced me to step away from the art,” Margolick adds. “I’ve been in this interestin­g balancing act.”

At the same time, she recognizes that art can be very healing for audiences.

“We need direct action, but we also need a place to process and we need a place for the general public to see these issues in a different light—to hear them told through a different medium,” she continues. “Not just reading it in the news but seeing it in movement.”

It’s in this spirit that Margolick will join Ballet BC dancer Livona Ellis in their first collaborat­ive duet, Fortress, along with two solos each at the Scotiabank Dance Centre on December 17 and 18.

One of Margolick’s solos, Allen Kaeja’s Trace Elements, was danced by her mother, Mary-Louise Albert, two decades ago. It includes text of a conversati­on that includes references to Nazi propaganda. The discussion is between a German man and a woman who is indifferen­t to the suffering of her mother’s generation in the Second World War.

“So the movement and the text are kind of countering each other,” Margolick notes. “A lot of the movement is reacting to the text.”

She points out that for many years, lots of people felt that discrimina­tion against the Jewish community was on the wane.

But this sense of indifferen­ce, which is on display in Kaeja’s text, has been punctured by intense antisemiti­sm within fascist movements gaining momentum in several countries, including the United States.

“It’s the oldest form of white supremacy,” she says. “It’s ancient—thousands of years of hate.”

Margolick is inspired not only by female Jewish resistance fighters during the Holocaust but also by her mother’s resilience and humility. “The act of giving away a solo that was once your own is an act of generosity and vulnerabil­ity,” she states. “And she did that with such enthusiasm and grace.”

Ellis is interpreti­ng another of Albert’s solos from the past, Peter Bingham’s Woman Walking (away). Ellis and Margolick, along with Vanessa Goodman, were all scheduled to give live performanc­es of Albert’s solos at the Scotiabank Dance Centre in November 2020. However, they were forced to perform them on video after a provincial health order banned live shows that month.

Goodman has since had a baby, so she’s not participat­ing this time. In advance of developing Fortress, Margolick says that she and Ellis talked at length about the influence of their mothers and grandmothe­rs on them. The two have known each other since they attended Arts Umbrella in their youth.

“This feels personal, like…a way to blend the past of growing up here in Vancouver with her into this new phase that we’re in in our lives—both in our 30s now—and thinking about where we want to go and where we’re at,” Margolick says.

The Dance Centre and the B.C. Movement Arts Society will present Livona Ellis and Rebecca Margolick presenting Fortress and four solos on Friday (December 17) and Saturday (December 18) at the Scotiabank Dance Centre.

 ?? Photo by Faviola Perez. ?? Ballet BC dancer Livona Ellis and New York–based Rebecca Margolick will dance their first duet together, Fortress, and four solos at the Scotiabank Dance Centre.
Photo by Faviola Perez. Ballet BC dancer Livona Ellis and New York–based Rebecca Margolick will dance their first duet together, Fortress, and four solos at the Scotiabank Dance Centre.

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