Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

UKRAINE’S BIG STEPS

DANCE: Kyiv City Ballet, Elevate Chicago Dance, Cloud Gate Theatre among season highlights

- BY KYLE MACMILLAN For the Sun-Times

Before a horrific war broke out in Ukraine earlier this year and seized the world’s attention and empathy, a visit by the once little-known Kyiv City Ballet might not have attracted much notice. But there is buzz aplenty as the company undertakes its first-ever American tour Sept. 16 through Oct. 24, with performanc­es Sept. 24 and 25 at the Auditorium Theatre, 50 E. Ida B. Wells.

“We’re nervous and excited at the same time,” said Artistic Director Ivan Kozlov from Paris.

For its Chicago performanc­es (auditorium theatre.org), the company will perform three works: “Thoughts,” created by company dancer Vladyslav Dobshynsky­i; “Tribute to Peace,” by Kozlov and his wife, Ekaterina, and a trio of wedding pas de deux from such famed classical ballets as “La Bayadère” and “Don Quixote.”

In 2012, Kozlov was asked to assemble a group of Ukrainian dancers for a European tour, and he decided to turn the temporary group into a permanent company, boldly basing its name on the famed New York City Ballet.

The bulk of the 40-member Kyiv City Ballet was on tour in Paris when the hostilitie­s began in February, with the rest arriving later from elsewhere in Europe. The city has sheltered these unwitting dance refugees since, with the famed Théâtre du Châtelet providing rehearsal space.

Despite the dark cloud hanging over them, the dancers have stayed true to their artistic vocation. “For us, it’s very important to be busy right now,” said Kozlov. “There is actually no place to go except to work. We’re trying to organize tour after tour, so we’ll have a place to work and to perform as much as possible.”

Although the dancers feel fortunate to maintain their jobs, they are still far from home and have to deal with the day-to-day uncertaint­y of what might happen to families and friends who are still in Ukraine. “As

soon as it is safe, we are more than happy to go home,” Kozlov said. “Home is home.”

Here is a look at 10 other dance events worth considerin­g this fall

Sept. 8, “It Starts Now,” Alejandro Cerrudo + Artists, Harris Theater for Music and Dance, 205 E. Randolph St. (harristhea­terchicago.org). Cerrudo makes his first return to the Harris stage since serving as resident choreograp­her with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago from 2008 through 2018. The Spanish choreograp­her was appointed artistic director of the Charlotte Ballet earlier this year, but he will be represente­d here with his first independen­tly produced project, which debuted at New York’s Joyce Theater in 2020.

Sept. 23-24 and Sept. 30-Oct. 1, Harvest Chicago Contempora­ry Dance Festival, Ruth Page Center for the Arts, 1016 N. Dearborn St. (hccdf.com). This 12-year-old event is produced by Nicole Gifford, who leads her own namesake company, and Melissa Mallinson, director of Ology Dance. This year’s installmen­t showcases Chicago groups like the Joel Hall Dancers and Hot Crowd Dance Company as well as visiting ensembles such as the Marquez Dance Project from Cleveland.

Sept. 29-Oct. 2, “Refraction,” Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, Harris Theater (harristhea­terchicago.org). Hubbard Street opens its 45th-anniversar­y season with a mixed bill featuring works by three widely recognized choreograp­hers. These include “The Windless Hold” by Cuban choreograp­her Osnel Delgado and “Dichotomy of a Journey” by Darrell Grand Moultrie, who has created dance works for an array of top companies and collaborat­ed with Beyoncé.

Oct. 9, Music of the Baroque and South Shore Dance, North Shore Center for the Performing Arts, 9501 Skokie Blvd., Skokie, and Oct. 11, Harris Theater (baroque.org). Chicago’s Music of the Baroque, a chamber orchestra focused on music of the 17th and 18th centuries, will collaborat­e for the firsttime ever with a dance company during this set of concerts. South Chicago Dance will take the stage as the musical ensemble performs selections from German composer Michael Praetorius’ “Terpsichor­e,” a 1612 group of more than 300 instrument­al dances named for the muse of dance.

Oct. 12-23, “Beyond Borders,” Joffrey Ballet, Lyric Opera House, 20 N. Upper Wacker Drive (joffrey.org). Joffrey Ballet, Chicago’s largest and most widely known dance company, launches its 2022-23 season with a mixed bill. The line-up from past and present includes a new work by Chanel DaSilva and “Suite Saint-Saëns,” a classic by the company’s late co-founder, Gerald Arpino.

Oct. 13-16, Elevate Chicago Dance 2022, six locations including The Dance Center of Columbia College, 1306 S. Michigan Ave. (chicagodan­cemakers.org). Ysayë Alma, Donnetta Jackson and Trae Turner are among the 30 area choreograp­hers and companies who will take part in the third installmen­t of this citywide festival, organized by the Chicago Dancemaker­s Forum. Featured will be indoor and outdoor performanc­es, as well as workshops, panel discussion­s and in-person and virtual screenings.

Oct. 14 and 15, Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan, Auditorium Theatre (auditorium­theatre.org). Founded in 1973 by choreograp­her Lin Hwai-min, the widely traveled Taiwanese company reinterpre­ts Asian mythology and folklore through a contempora­ry lens. Cheng Tsung-lung, who took over as artistic director in 2020, created this fantastica­l work based on his mother’s accounts of “13 Tongues,” a celebrated 1960s street performer, and his memories of Bangka, the oldest district in Taipei.

Oct. 21 and 22, Giordano Dance Chicago, Harris Theater (harristhea­terchicago. org). Giordano Dance Chicago, one of this country’s oldest jazz-dance companies, marks its 60th anniversar­y in 2023. Under the artistic leadership of Nan Giordano, the daughter of the company’s founder, it will open its celebrator­y season with a new work by Cesar Salinas, Giordano’s associate artistic director, and other selections from the company’s repertoire.

Oct. 27-28, “The Rite of Spring/common ground[s],” Harris Theater, co-production of the Pina Bausch Foundation, Ecole des Sables, and Sadler’s Wells (harristhea­ter chicago.org). Few names are more iconic in the history of modern dance than Pina Bausch (1940-2009), who gained internatio­nal renown with her stylized, expression­ist brand of dance theater. A group of dancers from 14 West African countries will revive Bausch’s milestone 1975 work, “The Rite of Spring,” and dancer-choreograp­hers Germaine Acogny and Malou Airaudo, a Bausch acolyte, will perform “common ground[s],” a duet they created exploring their shared experience­s.

Nov. 5, Deeply Rooted Dance Theater, Auditorium Theatre (auditorium­theatre.org). Deeply Rooted recently marked its 25th anniversar­y as one of Chicago’s top dance companies, with a distinctiv­e contempora­ry style that melds ballet and modern dance with African and African American dance. The 10-member company will present a program mixing existing repertoire with new works.

 ?? CHERYL MANN ?? Fernando Duarte, Hansol Jeong and the Joffrey Ballet ensemble present “Vespertine,” part of the “Beyond Borders” program.
CHERYL MANN Fernando Duarte, Hansol Jeong and the Joffrey Ballet ensemble present “Vespertine,” part of the “Beyond Borders” program.
 ?? KYIV CITY BALLET ?? The Kyiv City Ballet arrives at the Auditorium Theatre on Sept. 24.
KYIV CITY BALLET The Kyiv City Ballet arrives at the Auditorium Theatre on Sept. 24.
 ?? TODD ROSENBERG ?? Fernando Rodriguez and Katie Rafferty of Giordano Dance Chicago.
TODD ROSENBERG Fernando Rodriguez and Katie Rafferty of Giordano Dance Chicago.
 ?? MREID PHOTOGRAPH­Y, SOUTH CHICAGO DANCE THEATRE ?? Kim Davis of South Chicago Dance Theatre.
MREID PHOTOGRAPH­Y, SOUTH CHICAGO DANCE THEATRE Kim Davis of South Chicago Dance Theatre.
 ?? LIU CHEN-HSIANG ?? Cloud Gate Dance Theatre performs “13 Tongues.”
LIU CHEN-HSIANG Cloud Gate Dance Theatre performs “13 Tongues.”

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