The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta Ballet performs spoken-word project,

Verse, movement meet in love letter to city of Atlanta.

- By Cynthia Bond Perry For the AJC

“Her shoulders open to the possibilit­y there might yet emerge wings.”

So sounds the voice of Marc Bamuthi Joseph as Atlanta Ballet dancers rehearse to an airy waltz that sounds both meandering and mysterious, like a walk in the woods on a hazy summer afternoon. Several women are spaced neatly across the space, softly swaying. They spread their arms behind them, shrug their shoulders and rise into languid arabesques with a tactile, sensual feel. The warm, fragrant air is almost palpable.

As they dance, we hear Joseph’s spoken-word verses, part of a complex love letter to the city of Atlanta.

Joseph will perform his poem as part of “Home in 7,” one of three works the company will present this weekend at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre. The concert will also feature “Boiling Point” by Darrell Grand Moultrie and the world premiere of “Playground” by Douglas Lee.

Created in collaborat­ion with choreograp­her Amy Seiwert and musician and composer Daniel Bernard Roumain, “Home in 7” frames, through nostalgia and poem, “different pictures of a politicall­y and romantical­ly alive Atlanta,” Joseph explained. These range from the Atlanta Braves to Southern belles and from Georgia red clay to the mythic Phoenix bird that rises out of its ashes.

First presented in 2011, “Home in 7” is one of the most synergis- tic collaborat­ions built under artistic director John McFall’s watch, and a prime example of McFall’s efforts to carve out a unique identity for the company by commission­ing works that reflect Atlanta’s culture and history.

Joseph explained that the work owes its synergy, in part, to Atlanta Ballet dancers’ versatilit­y, plus a certain “elasticity” that is a part of the hip-hop culture that surrounded Joseph and Roumain as they grew up.

Born in New York City of Haitian parents, Joseph performed on Broadway during his youth and attended private high school on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. When selecting a college, he sought an experience rooted in the African-American tradition. He enrolled in Morehouse College, where he majored in English literature while coming of age in Atlanta, a city he saw as the cultural epicenter and the capital of African America.

At Morehouse, Saul Williams, actor, poet and activist, inspired Joseph to pursue spokenword poetry, part of a centuries-old oral tradition that came into prominence through the Beat poets of the 1950s and 1960s, Joseph said. The genre subsequent­ly developed within the black poetry movement, then as part of hip-hop culture, and now in poetry slams across the U.S. and beyond.

Joseph acknowledg­es influence from a number of poets, rappers, artists and activists. But his style aligns most closely with Ntozake Shange, author of “For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/ When the Rainbow Is Enuf,” whose choreopoem­s reflect a strong link between spoken language and body language. Joseph has performed and toured his style of versebased dance theater extensivel­y; he currently serves as director of performing arts at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco.

In this role, he’s been part of a larger conversati­on among arts institutio­ns across the country, such as symphony orchestras and ballet companies, seeking to attract new audiences. To this end, Atlanta Ballet has explored ideas and potential projects with Joseph, said Atlanta Ballet President and CEO Arturo Jacobus, though funding has been elusive, to date.

As the American population grows increasing­ly diverse and minority population­s gain education and resources, isolated projects, such as “Home in 7,” may bring in new audiences; but to keep them coming back, Joseph said, arts institutio­ns will have to incorporat­e different cultural viewpoints into the artistic canon.

“Home in 7” offers a powerful example of how the values of a somewhat marginaliz­ed art form can find a home within classical ballet to create a work that’s both timely and relevant across cultures. It’s the kind of work that can continue to keep Atlanta Ballet in step with its changing city.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHARLIE MCCULLERS ?? Pedro Gamino, Tara Lee and Deonte Hansel appeared in Atlanta Ballet’s 2011 production of “Home in 7.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHARLIE MCCULLERS Pedro Gamino, Tara Lee and Deonte Hansel appeared in Atlanta Ballet’s 2011 production of “Home in 7.”

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