LA Dance Project (LADP) is back in Paris this week and the company’s much anticipated return is, for the Parisian public, a foregrounding rendez vous with Benjamin Millepied, the Project’s founding director. Only a few months before he takes over the direction of the Paris Opera Ballet, the charismatic Millepied shows initiative, and a very open mind.
Millepied chose to anchor L.A. Dance Project 1 with American roots. Cunningham and Forsythe repertoire pieces framed two of his own creations, and the whole made for a coherent evening, where modern American movement enlightened the creative impetus of the director’s work.
This year, he gave carte blanche to three international choreographers, and diversity is the driving force behind L.A. Dance Project 2. Contrasting pieces succeed each other: Emmanuel Gat's Morgan's Last Chug, Hiroaki Umeda’s Peripheral Stream – the world première – Closer, which Millepied choreographed in 2006, and Murder Ballads, by New York City Ballet (NYCB) dancer Justin Peck.
Gat’s Morgan's Last Chug was interesting, but it did not meet much enthusiasm on my part. Five dancers – four men and one woman – move in and out of circular patterns and spiral their way across the otherwise empty stage in seemingly latent fashion, and while the piece makes good use of space, levels, contact devices and interwoven patterns, little contact is made with the audience. That in itself is not startling, but the onstage relationship of the dancers with one another does not evolve much either. Morgan's Last Chug is most probably deliberately abstract, with postmodernist intent. The musical accompaniment – which includes excerpts of Bach’s Suite Francaise no. 1 en re mineur (French Suite no. 1 in D minor) and Purcell’s Musique funebre pour la Reine Mary (Music for the funeral of Queen Mary) – is like a base, over the top of which resonates a Jim Norton recording of Samuel Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape. But only short sequences are audible, leading us back to the abstract choreography.
The piece, however, has its place as the opening act of an LADP bill. The research-based imprint of the work recalls ‘works in process’ or studio showings, which give audiences a more intimate glimpse into the creative process. LADP is, as its director insists, not just another dance company, but a collective in which each artist brings something to the table, shares artistic and physical experiences, and aims to present dance to audiences in different ways.
This ethos resonates in the second piece, but the overall effect is that of a more polished piece. Peripheral Stream is a fine example of Hiroaki Umeda’s pluridisciplinary approach. He is as much a visual artist as he is a choreographer. The dance is neat and the movement contained within delimited perimeters. The cast – McKenna Birmingham, Rachelle Rafailedes Morgan Ludo and Nathan Makolandra – execute the technically arduous task with impeccable synchronicity, and their energy resonates off one another to great effect. Umeda’s use of a black and white screen at the back of the stage sends changing linear streams of light onto the bodies in movement and provokes, for the public, varying degrees of sensorial stimulation: Is the digital-esque screen installation responding to the frequency emanating from the dancers, or is the conceptual wave itself responsible for the movement?