The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ailey’s ‘ Testament’ honors earlier work

New dance film an updated response to signature piece.

- By Celia Wren

As if Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater didn’t have enough to deal with while creating a high- profile new work during a pandemic, there was the weather. Rain scuttled much of an outdoor shoot for its new dance film, “Testament” — a contempora­ry response to the company’s signature piece, “Revelation­s.”

When the precipitat­ion finally abated, Associate Artistic Director Matthew Rushing recalls wearily, “the lawn that we were dancing on was soaking wet, so the dancers’ feet got wet. And it was cold and chilly. It was challenge after challenge.”

Still, he adds, “I’m hoping that something beautiful comes out of that.”

Audiences will have a chance to see that beauty during the company’s first virtual season — streaming online through Dec. 31. The lineup includes the Thursday debut of “Testament,” which Rushing created with company member Clifton Brown and former company member

Yusha- Marie Sorzano. Also scheduled is the premiere of resident choreograp­her Jamar Roberts’ “A Jam Session for Troubling Times,” inspired by jazz great Charlie Parker, and “Ailey & Ellington,” a showcase of ballets Ailey set to scores by Duke Ellington. But since 2020 is the 60th anniversar­y of “Revelation­s,” that masterpiec­e is the season’s recurring refrain, with learnthe- movement workshops, archived recordings and more. All of the season’s offerings will be available free online for one week each.

“We decided to look at the possibilit­ies, as opposed to what isn’t possible,” Robert Battle, artistic director, said. Not that negatives haven’t been clear in 2020. After the coronaviru­s hit in the spring, the New York- based company was forced to suspend live performanc­es. To offset a revenue drop, the company took steps that including furloughin­g 16 full- time, nondancer staff members ( most of whom returned to work this fall) and institutin­g salary cuts.

The pandemic, Battle said, has “had a harsh impact financiall­y on the company. Not one that is not survivable. We have always been very discipline­d around our finances and making sure that we have an endowment for a rainy day. So, here’s that rainy day!”

The company shifted its presence into cyberspace, with online content that, the company estimates, has reached more than 10 million people in 121 countries. The troupe uploaded archived filmed performanc­es, but also generated such new pieces as “Dancer Diaries,” short movement- steeped films devised by the performers, and a # Theshow-Mustgoon series, which included digitally fused footage of dancers in separate locales rollicking through repertoire, as if together.

Meanwhile, Rushing and his colleagues moved ahead with “Testament,” which had been envisaged, pre- pandemic, as a live homage to “Revelation­s,” a beloved Ailey work that arcs dramatical­ly from grief and yearning to joy, against the backdrop of African American spirituals. Rushing, who has performed every male role in “Revelation­s,” thought that multiple creative voices would add richness to the tribute, so he partnered with Brown and Sorzano. Collaborat­ion was underway when the virus struck, forcing a pivot to a screen format. “We didn’t want to create a ballet that we would film,” Rushing says. “We really wanted to create a dance film.”

That aligned with the company’s efforts to bolster production values for its online offerings, following the year’s early experiment­s. “When we started out, everybody was in their living room and their dogs were running around,” Battle says. “Now we’re trying to up that.”

Cinematogr­apher Preston Miller, an alum of an Ailey/ Fordham BFA program, also worked on “Testament,” which features an original score by Damien Sneed.

In the midst of planning “Testament,” the death of George Floyd and subsequent activism for social justice prompted further recalibrat­ion. “There was no way we could continue on as usual,” Rushing says. The idea of protest became a theme in the film, which also explores concepts such as Afrofuturi­sm. Throughout the process, Rushing says, the focus was on refracting the essence, not the specifics, of the 1960 classic.

“We decided to stay away from quoting or doing any kind of movement that may be popular or well known from ‘ Revelation­s,’” he said. “We saw that as a way of respecting the work.”

Central to the essence of “Revelation­s” are its spirituals, a genre often infused with sorrow or longing. Rushing says his team decided to imbue “Testament” with a 2020 equivalent: “the reflection­s and feelings of the dancers, who are now going through some troubling times, ( turned) into our own personal spirituals.”

For example, a whirling, reaching solo by Samantha Figgins drew on her journal entries about resilience and overcoming self- doubt. A Washington, D. C., native, Figgins had seen some upsides to lockdown life. Sure, her cozy Harlem apartment had just barely enough space for her to practice — if she moved her couch. But with the sudden abundance of online content, she was able to take classes in different dance traditions, such as the Martha Graham technique. And the dancer used some of her off time to study American Sign Language, connecting with one aspect of her identity ( she has single- sided deafness). In her “Testament” solo, she incorporat­es an ASL soliloquy based on her journaling. The company, she says, gives dancers “space to bring their whole self into the room.”

As the virtual season approached, everyone had to get back into shape. In April, the company had shipped vinyl dance mats to make dancers’ homes more practice friendly. In mid- September, re- entry to the troupe’s Manhattan building began, as did a fiveweek conditioni­ng program the dancers participat­ed in virtually or in person. Among the safety measures during conditioni­ng and rehearsals, dancers wore masks, stayed in cohorts and checked in on a health app. To ensure distancing, stage managers used tape to divvy the studio floors into boxes, each large enough for a dancer.

Safety considerat­ions even necessitat­ed adjustment­s to “Revelation­s” when it was filmed in the fall at the Ailey Citigroup Theater and outdoors at Wave Hill, a public garden and cultural center in the Bronx. In this “Revelation­s” iteration, performers were farther apart than in recent years, and, Battle says, “the dancers really don’t do any partnering. So that’s been interestin­g.” He was cheered when he came across a video of “Revelation­s” from when Ailey himself was still dancing — the choreograp­her died in 1989 — and noticed more space between dancers. “We thought, ‘ Oh! This is justifiabl­e,’” Battle said.

As with the tweaked “Revelation­s,” the

19- dancer “Testament” was shot partly outdoors at Wave Hill, with the dancers removing their masks for the filming itself. Yes, it was cold, but once the dancing started, Figgins said, “that energy warms you up!”

And the pandemic has reinforced her belief in the art form’s invincibil­ity.

“Dance — your home is your body,” she says. “So wherever you are, you have access to that feeling and that calling. Dance cannot be contained.”

 ?? NICOLE TINTLE/ ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER ?? Rain interrupte­d the outdoor shoot of Alvin Ailey’s “Testament,” a companion piece to the 1960 classic “Revelation­s.”
NICOLE TINTLE/ ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER Rain interrupte­d the outdoor shoot of Alvin Ailey’s “Testament,” a companion piece to the 1960 classic “Revelation­s.”
 ?? PHOTOS BY NICOLE TINTLE/ ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER ?? American Dance Theater performers rehearse for the premiere of resident choreograp­her Jamar Roberts’ “A Jam Session for Troubling Times,” inspired by jazz great Charlie Parker.
PHOTOS BY NICOLE TINTLE/ ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER American Dance Theater performers rehearse for the premiere of resident choreograp­her Jamar Roberts’ “A Jam Session for Troubling Times,” inspired by jazz great Charlie Parker.
 ??  ?? In the midst of planning “Testament,” the death of George Floyd and subsequent activism prompted further recalibrat­ion, said Matthew Rushing, associate artistic director. “There was no way we could continue on as usual,” he said.
In the midst of planning “Testament,” the death of George Floyd and subsequent activism prompted further recalibrat­ion, said Matthew Rushing, associate artistic director. “There was no way we could continue on as usual,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States