The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Twin documentar­ies spotlight dance legends Ailey and Jones

- By Lindsey Bah

Alvin Ailey and Bill T. Jones may have a generation between them, but the two influentia­l choreograp­hers crossed paths at a few pivotal moments. Ailey was the one who commission­ed Jones’ first work, “Fever Swap,” in 1983. A few years later in 1989, at the height of the AIDS epidemic, Jones, then famous in his own right, would create one of his most notable works and a response to the crisis: “D-Man in the Waters.” It was also the year Ailey died at age 58 of complicati­ons from the disease.

So it’s a fateful coincidenc­e that this summer both men are getting the spotlight in two terrific documentar­ies: “Ailey,” opening nationwide on Aug. 6, and “Can You Bring It: Bill T. Jones and D-Man in the Waters,” which is currently in theaters.

“Ailey” director Jamila

Wignot said the project found her in 2017. She’d been a fan of Ailey influentia­l modern dance work and his company, the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, but realized she didn’t know much about him beyond that. It may have been intentiona­l on his part: Despite his fame, Ailey was a private person.

The documentar­y is partially framed around a new staging of a classic Ailey dance from choreograp­her Rennie Harris, who,

like Wignot, is trying to figure out “what made Mr. Ailey Mr. Ailey.” Thankfully, Wingot made a pivotal discovery that helped inch closer to an answer: Revealing audio recordings that he conducted in the last year of his life.

“That really opened up the possibilit­ies for the film,” Wignot said. “He revealed things that certainly were not part of his, you know, public presentati­on of self.”

Ailey in the recordings talks candidly about his childhood in a segregated, impoverish­ed Texas in the Depression, the deep wounds of a non-existent relationsh­ip with his father, the transforma­tive experience of seeing a pioneer like Katherine Dunham dance and his own sexual awakening, which for him was a beautiful experience.

“There’s so few in particular Black institutio­ns that survive their founders and it’s an extraordin­ary institutio­n in that regard,” Wignot said. “But I wanted people to remember this kind of deeply passionate, vulnerable, sensitive person who is at the heart of it and whose presence you still feel.”

The Bill T. Jones project came about differentl­y. Codirector Rosalynde LeBlanc, who herself had been a member of the Bill T. Jones/ Arnie Zane Company, was restaging “D-Man in the Waters” in 2012 and felt that it wasn’t coming alive.

“That question as to why the dance was so elusive was really what fueled the project,” LeBlanc said. “Originally, I wanted to put the piece in its historical context. The idea was to create an immersive experience for the students so they could understand the birth of the piece.”

In 1988, Zane, who was Jones’s co-director and romantic partner, died of AIDS complicati­ons. While creating a new dance after the loss, based around water and waves, one of the dancers in the company Demian Acquavella (D-Man) was also diagnosed with AIDS. In this context, the dance took on a different tenor and became about survival in the face of an epidemic.

LeBlanc enlisted noted documentar­y cinematogr­apher Tom Hurwitz for help creating the piece. But soon they realized their small project had evolved into something bigger and distinct from the other documentar­ies about Jones.

 ?? NEON VIA AP ?? This image courtesy of Neon shows a scene from “Ailey.”
NEON VIA AP This image courtesy of Neon shows a scene from “Ailey.”

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