The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rialto brings stunning, gravity-defying Parsons Dance

Program shines light on modern dance history, company’s aesthetic.

- By Robin Wharton ArtsATL

David Parsons, artistic director of Parsons Dance, acknowledg­es that his company and much of its repertoire emerged from a long-term collaborat­ion with Tony Award-winning lighting designer Howell Binkley. The two co-founded Parsons Dance in 1985 and worked together until Binkley’s death in 2020. That span of history will be on display this Sunday when Parsons Dance performs at Georgia State University’s Rialto Center for the Arts — fittingly, as part of the Rialto’s 2023-24 series Holding the Light. Binkley was Parsons’ close friend and

go-to collaborat­or for the bulk of the company’s repertory, Parsons told ArtsATL in an interview.

As with many Parsons Dance performanc­es, Sunday’s mixed bill will include “Caught,” the 1982 solo that put Parsons on the map as a choreograp­her. It is perhaps the foremost example of how Binkley contribute­d to the company’s signature aesthetic. In “Caught,” Binkley and Parsons created the illusion of flight with use of a strobe light and five minutes of gravity-defying choreograp­hy.

Though “Caught” usually features a male-presenting dancer, company member Zoey Anderson, a woman, will perform it on Sunday. “Zoey is a monster, the way she just attacks the movement,” said Parsons.

Parsons got his start on a scholarshi­p to the Ailey School in New York and was a protegé of choreograp­her Paul Taylor. Parsons and Binkley met while both were working for the Paul Taylor Dance Company.

For almost 40 years, the innovation they incubated within Parsons Dance has influenced theater, film and dance beyond the company. Binkley’s successful career lighting Broadway shows included two Tony Awards, the most recent in 2016 for “Hamilton.”

Parsons has accepted commission­s from companies throughout the United States and internatio­nally, including New York City Ballet and American Ballet Theatre. He has choreograp­hed for opera,

musicals and film, including Julie Taymor’s 1992 breakthrou­gh production for the small screen, “Fool’s Fire.” During John McFall’s early tenure as artistic director of Atlanta Ballet, McFall commission­ed Parsons to create a work for the company.

Binkley’s final collaborat­ion with Parsons, “The Road,” debuted in 2021. Originally lit by Binkley, the current version is lit by Christophe­r Chambers. It is the newest work on the bill and closes the first half of Sunday’s program.

Parsons choreograp­hed “The Road” to music by Yusuf Islam/Cat Stevens and said it was inspired by the singer-songwriter’s personal and artistic journey over the course of his career. “The Road” questions whether a life can ever be recounted as a story of purely linear progress. The dancers move across the stage with ceaseless, peripateti­c restlessne­ss, and the piece closes with a newer re-recording of the iconic 1971 compositio­n “Peace Train,” showing Yusuf’s circular return to old material with new attention.

Like “The Road,” the four remaining pieces highlight Parsons’ ongoing conversati­on with the forms, composers and performers of 20th century music.

The show will open with “Swing Shift,” a big, bold Parsons Dance staple built around what Parsons described as “massive partnering.” He aptly summarized it as a “hot, beautiful piece.” Set to an original score by Kenji Bunch, “Swing Shift” fills the stage with dancers in flowing costumes. Instrument­s used in the score surface into distinct voices, only to blend back into a harmonious whole, over and over. The choreograp­hy follows a similar pattern: Dancers lift one another and leap together in constantly shifting trios

and duets, creating a kaleidosco­pic constellat­ion of convergenc­es, mergers and separation­s.

The solo “Balance of Power” and the ensemble piece “Kind of Blue” evolved through Parsons’ exploratio­n of how formal musical techniques might be translated into dance. In “Balance of Power,” both choreograp­hy and music build from a simple rhythmic sequence into a technical tour de force, ultimately transformi­ng the dancer’s body into a visual cacophony of limbs and gestures. “Kind of Blue” takes cues from its namesake, Miles Davis’ monumental jazz hit, by using structured improvisat­ion to keep the dance fresh, every performanc­e unique.

The program’s final ensemble piece, “Nascimento,” was an early collaborat­ion with renowned Brazilian singer and composer Milton Nascimento. Parsons said Nascimento came to see him backstage when the company was on tour in Brazil. The composer told Parsons he loved what Parsons Dance was doing, and he wanted to compose a score for the company — for free. In the resulting piece, Parsons’ nostalgic, gestural reflection­s on his experience as a tourist in Brazil intertwine with Nascimento’s music, itself inspired by the composer’s encounter with Parsons’ art.

Throughout, the Rialto program will showcase Parsons’ athletic, stage-devouring adaptation of Lester Horton/Ailey and Taylor techniques. Though Sunday’s program is an all-Parsons bill, Parsons said fostering the work of outside choreograp­hers has been integral to the company’s mission. “A dancer’s career is like a minute long,” he reflected. “The way they grow during that time is getting to work with different minds.”

For Parsons, keeping talented dancers in the company means providing them with those opportunit­ies. Consequent­ly, Parsons Dance has produced work by more than 30 choreograp­hers, among them Robert Battle, the former artistic director of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, who also spent time as a dancer with the company. Those choreograp­hers were influenced by, and in turn have influenced, the Parsons Dance repertoire.

Like last season’s Rialto engagement of the Martha Graham Dance Company, Parsons’ show brings to the Atlanta stage important modern dance history, as well as what promises to be an afternoon of gorgeous dance. Parsons Dance last performed in the Atlanta metro area in 2021. This is a rare opportunit­y not to be missed.

 ?? ?? Zoey Anderson is to perform David Parsons’ iconic solo “Caught” on Sunday, a role usually performed by a male-identifyin­g dancer.
Zoey Anderson is to perform David Parsons’ iconic solo “Caught” on Sunday, a role usually performed by a male-identifyin­g dancer.
 ?? COURTESY continued from C1 ?? Parsons Dance on Sunday “brings to the Atlanta stage important modern dance history.”
COURTESY continued from C1 Parsons Dance on Sunday “brings to the Atlanta stage important modern dance history.”

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