San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Putting Fosse’s spirit onstage

Revival of the choreograp­her’s ‘Dancin’,’ which launched at San Diego’s Old Globe last spring, is ready to take on Broadway

- BY GIA KOURLAS & YAEL MALKA Kourlas and Malka write for The New York Times.

Karli Dinardo never imagined that, at 5 feet, 5 inches, she was tall enough to be a Bob Fosse dancer. Broadway veteran Dylis Croman was introduced to the Fosse style by Ann Reinking, one of his most influentia­l dancers, when she was just 14 at a summer dance program in Florida; she thought, “Where has this been all my life?”

Kolton Krouse, originally trained in ballet, left Juilliard before graduating to perform as Tumblebrut­us in the revival of “Cats.” And Yeman Brown, who performed in “Jagged Little Pill,” has also danced with Reggie Wilson, a contempora­ry choreograp­her who has slyly referenced Fosse in his work for years.

The cast of “Bob Fosse’s Dancin’ ” isn’t cookie cutter, and neither is Fosse’s choreograp­hy. There’s more to it than fishnet tights, bowler hats and thrusting hips. Fosse’s dance language — subtle and internal — is fueled not just by the physicalit­y of the body but by the intention behind it. It’s precise, but it’s not about pushing to an edge; it’s about vibrations. Gwen Verdon, the celebrated dancer who was Fosse’s third wife, used to say it was like putting a car in neutral while flooring the gas.

“You’re not moving,” said Nicole Fosse, their daughter. “But everything inside of you is buzzing with energy.”

Now 22 dancers are getting the chance to feel the buzz, and to let it out. The thrill of “Bob Fosse’s Dancin’,” a revival of the 1978 musical, is, aptly, its dancers: 16 cast members and six understudi­es. All are principals. No two are alike, not even a tiny bit. And that’s the way Fosse wanted it.

They range in age from 19 to 45. The men aren’t all short, and the women aren’t all tall. They understand the difference between sexiness and sensuality, how to bridge the gap between stillness and explosiven­ess. The director, Wayne Cilento, an original cast member, wants to show Fosse’s range — his vaudeville roots, his humor, his fluidity, his wit.

“He wanted to do a show where he had absolutely nothing pinning him down to anything specific, like a story,” Cilento said. “He wanted to do any kind of dance he wanted and to just be free.”

The revival, which opens at the Music Box Theatre in New York on March 19, has been streamline­d from three acts to two. Material has been added — including a montage from “Big Deal,” Fosse’s final show, in 1986, and a re-envisioned number, “Big City Mime,” which was cut from the original “Dancin’.” For that section, Cilento is following Fosse’s scenario for the number but has assembled movement from different shows — including “Pippin,” “Sweet Charity” and “Liza With a Z” — to replace its lost choreograp­hy. So, like all the movement in the show, it’s by Fosse.

“It’s not about me being a choreograp­her,” Cilento said. “I’m staging it, I’m directing it, I’m putting the pieces together. It’s really about his style, his essence, the way he moved. If I can execute that, if the audience gets a feeling of who he was as a man, as a choreograp­her, as a director? That’s my job.”

There’s been talk about a revival for years, but the show’s return to Broadway — after a run at the Old Globe in San Diego last spring — comes down to Nicole Fosse, the founder and artistic director of the Verdon Fosse Legacy, which preserves and copyrights the works of her parents. She gave it her blessing.

“It’s a real testament to my father’s creativity and ability in the dance world outside of the constructs of musical theater,” she said. “He always had doubts about himself as a choreograp­her. And so this was his attempt at — a successful attempt at — proving that he could hang with the big guys in the world of choreograp­hy.”

The shadow of Jerome Robbins looms large now as it did then. Like Robbins, Fosse abided by the idea that less is more. Dancing without pandering.

Christine Colby Jacques, who reproduced Fosse’s choreograp­hy for the new “Dancin’ ” and was in its original cast, recalled Fosse’s words on opening night: “He said: ‘All I can say to you now is, this is yours. Just work as we have been rehearsing. Don’t try to make the audience love you. Let them come to you.’ ”

Cilento does not want his dancers to look like machines. There is precision, and then there is brittlenes­s. He is only too aware that Fosse is a pop culture fixture whose choreograp­hy has been, in recent years, reduced to a tough minimalist look or copied — you see it in Michael Jackson, Beyoncé and even the recent Wednesday Addams dance — and, often, overly simplified.

But rather than feel angry about how “they’re not doing it exactly the way he did it,” Cilento said, he is choosing to focus on what remains.

“He left this incredible tapestry of work for him to go forward,” he said. “I feel like getting him back where he belongs and representi­ng him in the right way.”

Still, in San Diego, the show had problems; the two acts felt like different shows. The first half flew by with exuberant numbers, including “Percussion,” a fourpart section in which the dancers respond to instrument­s; the zippy trio “Big Noise From Winnetka”; and the galvanizin­g conclusion, “Dancin’ Man.”

Leading into “Dancin’ Man” was (and is) “Big City Mime,” in which the sleek, elegant Peter John Chursin loosely portrays a version of Fosse — others in the show take on his persona, too — as he lands in New York City and encounters prostitute­s and pimps, and eventually finds his dancing body.

“Big City Mime” is fun, like a dream or fantasy ballet that suddenly appears within the arc of “Dancin’.” It features an array of references to Fosse’s repertoire, including “Mein Herr” from “Cabaret” (with different music), “Rich Man’s Frug” from “Sweet Charity” and Fosse’s snake dance from “The Little Prince.” In one moment referring to the snake, the dancers arrive at a bracing stop and extend their arms in a V.

“You really need to be overexagge­rated,” Cilento said at a rehearsal. “It’s got to be bigger than you want. Hands. Fingers out, look down at your armpit. Legs wide. This thing needs to be major.”

But the second act, which starts with a bang and the galvanizin­g “Sing, Sing, Sing,” had pacing problems. “America,” even the dancers agreed, was problemati­c. In reframing this patriotic number for more modern audiences, the performers spoke about social justice issues; it gravitated toward the pedantic.

“I went back, and I looked at what Bob did, and it was really interestin­g,” Cilento said. “He made comments, but he never made direct comments. He was commenting on men and women and slavery. But it was all through song and dance, and it was entertainm­ent. So nothing was dry and pointed.”

His version of the number now is in keeping with Fosse’s “America” — told through song and dance. Cilento has also added a coda to the ending, in which several cast members return to bring back a few crucial dancing moments. In San Diego, it ended with a lone dancer evoking the image of Fosse.

“I think I kind of nosedived,” Cilento said with one of his frequent giggles. “But you only know when you see it. I felt empty and uncomforta­ble at the end when I was watching it. I just felt like it needed to be a lift.”

He added later: “It can’t be heavy-handed. It’s got to move like fire.”

Manuel Herrera, 39, who started out training in dance at his family’s studio in North Carolina before attending the School of American Ballet, has focused more on acting than dancing in recent years.

“Dancers get very pigeonhole­d,” he said. “A lot of people don’t want you to step out of that lane.”

And on Broadway dance is often seen as a footnote, an interlude. Dancers in musical theater, Herrera said, aren’t exactly celebrated.

“It’s a dream show. I feel like I’ve been waiting for this show my entire career.”

passionate and he wasn’t a brute. When he did pass on, we had a strong enough platform individual­ly for us to take the reins and run with it and make him proud. And I think we did.

Q:

What was your process for getting into Franklin’s volatile and controllin­g character? Was it difficult letting that go at the end of the day?

A:

My mother saved me every time. I get to the set, I go into hair and makeup, and I’m Franklin, 17, 18 hours a day with an American accent. At the end of the day, I take the makeup off and put my clothes on, but I can’t get rid of Franklin. I get home, fortunatel­y London’s eight hours ahead of us, so by the time I get home, it’s morning or lunchtime in London. I call and say, “Morning, Mum. How are you?” She says, “Hello, my son.” And I’m back.

Q:

What’s next for you?

A:

I’m obviously focused on movies. I want for people to see me on the big screen. I’m also going to do this project with Donald Glover that’s a commentary on the fanfare surroundin­g a pop star and the psychology of that. I think it’s going to be a fan favorite.

Q:

How do you think fans of “Snowfall” will respond when the finale finally airs?

A:

I think the fans are just going to really enjoy it. We’ve always been chasing “The Wire.” I love that show. When the conclusion of “Snowfall” comes, I think there will be a conversati­on about whether this show or “The Wire” was the greatest crime show. I’m excited to hear that conversati­on.

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 ?? YAEL MALKA THE NEW YORK PHOTOS ?? The choreograp­her’s energy, fluidity and wit are focuses of the new revival of Bob Fosse’s 1978 show “Dancin’.”
YAEL MALKA THE NEW YORK PHOTOS The choreograp­her’s energy, fluidity and wit are focuses of the new revival of Bob Fosse’s 1978 show “Dancin’.”
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 ?? JULIETA CERVANTES ?? Dancers (from left) Jacob Guzman, Ron Todorowski, Karli Dinardo and Peter Chursin in “Bob Fosse’s Dancin’ ” at the Old Globe last year.
JULIETA CERVANTES Dancers (from left) Jacob Guzman, Ron Todorowski, Karli Dinardo and Peter Chursin in “Bob Fosse’s Dancin’ ” at the Old Globe last year.

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