San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

THEY GOT THE BEAT

City Ballet’s percussive ‘Inspiratio­n in Motion’ program features three refreshed dance works and the Act II pas de deux from ‘Giselle’

- BY MARCIA LUTTRELL Luttrell is a freelance writer.

Contempora­ry ballet combines the technical training of the classical vernacular with nontraditi­onal music and movement.

The results can energize dancers, who get to perform their pirouettes and grand pliés with a new perspectiv­e.

That’s one of the reasons why City Ballet resident choreograp­hers Geoff Gonzalez and Elizabeth Wistrich are looking forward to the staging of “Inspiratio­n in Motion.”

The show is playing at two venues beginning Friday.

It includes refreshed versions of three original works that are performed to percussive music, along with the poignant Act II pas de deux from “Giselle.”

Gonzalez was rehearsing an original work, titled “Battu,” at the company’s Pacific Beach studio last month. He created the piece in 2019, but he decided to completely change the accompanim­ent.

“I wanted to find music that made me feel something and get excited,” he said. “I don’t always have an opportunit­y to choose what I like. So, this time, I got to have a little more fun.”

Gonzalez was in the process of mixing four compositio­ns that integrate a disco track with the slinky, infectious melody from “Caravan,” a jazz standard popularize­d by Duke Ellington in the 1930s.

He’ll also add the skills of Adam Larocca, a drummer who will layer the music with additional percussion.

“Getting it tight for recording is a challenge, but I wanted to create music inspired by other music,” Gonzalez explained.

“I want to use the energy of the beat for creating movement, not so much for developing the constructi­on of the dance. Collaborat­ions are a dream for artists. It’s like, let’s see what we can come up with.”

Wistrich and Gonzalez are from different generation­s and get their ideas from a mix of modern and traditiona­l influences.

Gonzalez’s work showcases sensual partnering and jazzy, fluid movement. At rehearsal, he wears a T-shirt and black athletic pants, and occasional­ly he demonstrat­es a move that the dancers watch and repeat.

In “Battu,” the dancers practiced synchroniz­ed lines, crossing in front and behind each other.

“It has drive that way,” Gonzales explained. “Transition­s are a great way to energize movement. It’s all about crossing at the right times and making the right moves.”

Percussive instrument­al music also accompanie­s Wistrich’s “Beyond the Circle” and “Straw Feet.”

She co-founded City Ballet three decades ago, and during that time she has seen her company perform more than 20 works by George Balanchine, a pioneer of contempora­ry ballet.

Her style is similar, with tightly structured movement that displays stunning athleticis­m and gestures that grab the eye.

When creating the steps for a dance, Wistrich is known for writing pages and pages of notes. Then she puts aside the ideas she has committed to paper and heads for the studio, moving through the corps de ballet, directing steps with encouragem­ent and clarificat­ion.

She has a signature look: dark blond hair pulled back into a ponytail, jacket with colorful scarf, black pants and low heels. Her voice is even-toned and she has a regal demeanor, moving deliberate­ly with perfect posture, a discipline she attributes to her mother, a dance teacher who reminded her from across the kitchen table, ‘Don’t slouch.’ ”

Her choreograp­hy for “Beyond the Circle” and “Straw Feet” was created in the 1990s and now refreshed by the current company dancers.

“Beyond the Circle” is named after an album that features ancient Japanese percussive instrument­s by Osamu Kitajima, a soundscape that helped her to create the work’s intricate partnering.

“Straw Feet” was inspired by the vision of migrating animals, crossing the Serengeti against the backdrop of a shimmering noonday sun.

An original score by Brian Kohn accompanie­s her work, and the dancers wear leotards in desert colors of orange and yellow.

In one segment, the company dancers moved in tandem to the rhythm, bending their hands at the wrist and fluttering their fingers in a winglike gesture that called to mind a mass of moving birds.

Dancers Iago Breschi and Ariana Gonzalez rehearsed a jaw-dropping, catlike move. She ran towardbres­chi and jumped up to straddle his waist. While he supported her, she swung her body backward and slipped down and through his legs, so that her head was even with the floor and facing the opposite direction.

The first show will be staged at Baker-baum Concert Hall in La Jolla, where the company has performed just once before.

It’s an ideal venue for more intimate contempora­ry ballet works.

“We are definitely interested in reaching out to La Jolla,” Gonzalez said. “We want to build an audience there.”

Though they come from different discipline­s and times, both of City Ballet’s resident choreograp­hers are single-minded when it comes to perfecting original work. At rehearsal, the company dancers demonstrat­ed skillful teamwork and an enthusiasm for interpreti­ng original movement ideas.

Gonzalez smiled and summed up the advantages in one sentence.

“We run a cool place.”

 ?? ANNA SCIPIONE ?? City Ballet dancers Lucas Ataide and Sumire Ito in the company’s upcoming “Inspiratio­n in Motion” program.
ANNA SCIPIONE City Ballet dancers Lucas Ataide and Sumire Ito in the company’s upcoming “Inspiratio­n in Motion” program.
 ?? CHELSEA PENYAK ?? City Ballet dancers perform in “Inspiratio­n in Motion.”
CHELSEA PENYAK City Ballet dancers perform in “Inspiratio­n in Motion.”

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