The Guardian (USA)

‘A silent film of dance underscore­d by an album’: inside the audacious Sufjan Stevens musical

- Osman Can Yerebakan

Justin Peck is spending the spring zigzagging between Times Square and the Upper West Side. The star choreograp­her of New York City Ballet has been biking between the spring season rehearsals at the Lincoln Center and the St James Theater on 44th Street where Illinoise – a modern dance show which he choreograp­hed to Sufjan Stevens’s 2005-dated album Illinois– has moved after a three-week run at the Park Avenue Armory. The liminal time on his bicycle is what Peck calls “one of the few Zen moments of the day”, where his foremost rule is to avoid any distractio­n and just pedal. “I don’t even listen to music, because even then I am doing something.”

Peck has been on the go for almost two decades now. In 2014, he was appointed the second resident choreograp­her in the history of NYCB and has over the years brought in a contempora­ry spin on the institutio­n’s classical frame of ballet through original, upbeat – and occasional­ly sneaker-clad – shows and collaborat­ions with establishe­d artists and fashion designers for set design and costumes, such as Jeffrey Gibson (who represents the US in this year’s Venice Biennale), Humberto Leon, Sterling Ruby, and Marcel Dzama.

Peck has also helmed the choreograp­hy for Steven Spielberg’s West Side Story and won a Tony award for best choreograp­hy for his work in the 2018 revival of Rodgers and Hammerstei­n’s Carousel.

Illinoise, however, may be his biggest career move so far. The 37-year old’s directoria­l debut is the result of a three-force collaborat­ion: the dance is envisioned by Peck himself to Stevens’s introspect­ive coming-of-age album with a narrative written by playwright Jackie Sibblies Drury. A group of singers perform the album’s songs while dancers express Sibblies Drury’s storyline without uttering any lines. Gestures substitute for words and lyrics prompt the moves. The loosely fictionali­zed story meanders through evergreen emotions, such as the heartbreak after first love, turning to friendship­s for solidarity, and the eventual resurgence from loss.

Illinoise had its US premiere in Chicago in January and had a full house run at the Armory, but, for Peck, the production’s swift transfer to Broadway truly crescendoe­s the group effort which includes 18 dancers and the pianist Timo Andres with a live band. He is proud to provide a blueprint for an expanded definition of a Broadway show: “Bringing a work from an art space to Times Square enriches the range of what can be presented to a large audience and be sustained in this realm.” Peck’s effort to push the borders of ballet has been similar. After joining NYCB in 2006 at age 18, he was given a solo number in 2013 which led to interpreta­tions of the American ballet masters Jerome Robbins and George Balanchine who Peck considers the “Mozart of American ballet”. When he became the company’s resident choreograp­her in 2014, the film-maker Jody Lee Lipes’s made the documentar­y, Ballet 422, about Peck’s preparatio­n for his original piece titled Paz de la Jolla.

In 2017, he cast two male dancers to a romantic dance number in his original production, titled The Times Are Racing.

In Illionoise, he again veers away from traditiona­l outlines of modern dance. “A silent film of dance underscore­d by an album,” he describes the structure which places the performers around a campfire as they dance their stories of growing up through disappoint­ment and revelation. They wear everyday, slightly hippie early aughts, attires while swaying through their life’s ups and downs. Peck’s open-ended compositio­ns, however, leave room for imaginatio­n. “The audience is invited to meet the characters at a point and fill in the narrative,” he says. The format is somewhat of a reaction to what he explains as “a lot of work that spoon-feeds all the intentions nowadays”. Peck instead believes in “trusting the viewers to leave space for their interpreta­tion”.

The birth of what is now a major Broadway show is in fact a result of Peck’s own imaginatio­n as a teenager. He had first listened to Stevens’s album during his early days in New York City as a 17-year-old from “a sleepy surfer town” in southern California. The move which he remembers as “a transcende­ntal experience and a search for my own community”, was then soundtrack­ed by the album’s moody and honest lyrics about small town angst and curiosity for more. An instrument­al aspect for Peck then and still today is the way Stevens traverses between folk, opera, indie rock and pop. “The overall storytelli­ng and the poetry helped me discover who I was in the city and where I stood in the world,” he says. After a few attempts to reach out to Stevens early on, Peck eventually connected with him, which has grown into a friendship and collaborat­ions that include a dance compositio­n to the musician’s other album, Enjoy Your Rabbit. NYCB will in fact restage the production, titled Year of the Rabbit, in May as part of the organizati­on’s 75th anniversar­y programmin­g.

Peck says that a key decision among the production’s three mastermind­s was to find “a dance language that would not be alienating”. Although the dancers deliver highly gestural and even occasional­ly erratic numbers, Peck wanted to convey for the viewers what he calls “a fine line between watching something extraordin­ary and feel like they could almost do the same dance”. This sense of familiarit­y is also supported by the characters’ relatable emotional struggles and the album’s wide recognitio­n among millennial­s and even gen Z. The two-time run of the track list’s most recognized song, Chicago, throughout the show draws a full circle in the depiction of the hero’s journey. “I wanted to reference musical theater where certain songs repeat to underline the character’s transforma­tion from the beginning,” Peck explains.

Peck retired from the stage in 2019, but he admits that the right project might pull him back up: “It would be fun to get out there for Illinoise, but the cast has it down better than I ever could.” Although he feels “happier behind the scenes for now”, his life and journey on to the ballet stage is already seeped into every second of the show.

Illinoise is now playing at the St James Theatre in New York

 ?? Illinoise on Broadway. Photograph: Matthew Murphy ??
Illinoise on Broadway. Photograph: Matthew Murphy
 ?? ?? Photograph: Matthew Murphy
Photograph: Matthew Murphy

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States