Christmas came and went, leaving New York City draped in shreds of crass consumerism like bits of sodden tinsel. But at the Joyce Theater, with Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo in residence, the Christmas spirit was still very much alive.
Since 1974, this intrepid company of men, each of whom dance both female and male roles brilliantly, has been refining their shtick their art, subverting the gender politics of the ballet world, slaying audiences with their technical powers and their unique brand of high/low comedy: sometimes slapstick, sometimes deeply inside-baseball. Program B at the Joyce featured wicked send-ups of warhorses that have long provoked hilarity and admiration; repeat samplings of these classics always seem to offer some new twist to savor.
I was startled to see a toy piano on stage in Yes, Virginia, Another Piano Ballet. Having seen the piece with a grand piano, I wondered how the Boy in Brick (Mikhail Mudkin, nom de guerre for Raydel Caceres) was going to slide the Girl in Lavender (Anya Marx/Shohei Iwahama) under the piano – a hilarious move I remembered from a past performance. Mudkin finessed that nicely. Moments later the Girl in Green (Holly Dey-Abroad/Felix Molinero del Paso) nimbly avoided a collision with the piano by jumping over it. No one actually plays the piano in this ballet. The diminutive prop lent an Alice-in-Wonderland feel to the zany, affectionate take-off on Jerome Robbins’ Dances at a Gathering, in which dancers identified only by the color of their simple country-folk garb alternate playful or pensive moves with maneuvers ripped from Eastern European folk dance. Piped-in Chopin spurred the virtuosic Marx into some blistering pointe work, a frenzy of Bavarian Schuhplattler-style body slapping, and a series of high-kicking relevés that gleefully skewered the tiresome tambourine-smashing-big-toe solo from Esmeralda. Robbins’ bucolic folk seemed barely troubled by something in their past, whereas Trockadero veteran choreographer Peter Anastos lifted the veil on a community beset by petty rivalries, ungainly lifts and faked injuries, whose lives could’ve been chronicled in a reality TV series titled Real Housewives of Dances at a Gathering.
The tiny piano called to mind a photo of iconoclast composer John Cage at a toy piano. His famous collaborations with Merce Cunningham got the Trocks treatment in Patterns in Space. Three dancers in jewel-toned unitards crushed their Cunningham assignments, scampering to the beat of their internal drummers, leaping like arrows, tilting torsos and holding 4th-position relevé balances. A taped score was fortified by the carryings-on of Olga Supphozova/Robert Carter and Boris Dumbkopf/Takaomi Yoshino who wielded toy xylophone, bubble wrap, aerosol spray cans, metal mixing bowls and whisks as if they were sacred vessels.