Doug Varone is the most successful narrative choreographer today. He is peerless in his ability to transform abstractions, coupled with compelling and complementary music, into dance pieces that leave the audience with a sense of having seen something with a cohesive beginning, middle and end.
Mr Varone’s company, Doug Varone and Dancers, is the current recipient of the US Department of State’s DanceMotion USA grant, which gave him and his company the opportunity to collaborate with Argentina-based aerial troupe Brenda Angiel Aerial Dance Company. As part of the BAM Next Wave Festival, Mr Varone presented his 2006 Boats Leaving, and Ms Angiel presented her 2010 8cho, a series of aerial vignettes. The two companies joined forces to create the première Bilingua.
Mr Varone’s Boats Leaving, culled from photographs, is rife with segmented bodies and flailing limbs. The dancers assemble themselves in momentary tableaux, just long enough for the audience to begin to assign meaning to seemingly arbitrary poses before breaking away to form another scene. This piece seems to me a study in deconstruction: there is the constant assembling, disassembling, and reassembling, joined by the minuscule jerking of arms and legs and heads – as if the dancers are breaking down systematically. At one point, all of the dancers lie on their stomachs and inchworm their way across the floor, bathed in blue light. There is something of struggle and also of perseverance in this moment--this is surely not the most efficient way to move, and yet the dancers never hesitate.
Though Arvo Pärt’s Te Deum (yes, another Arvo Pärt piece) seems heavy-handed at times, Mr Varone’s incredibly aerobic choreography saves this piece from becoming too weighted. I admire his juxtaposition of drabness – the dancers’ muted grey, green and blue costumes and frequently dark lighting – with the image of hope that kept appearing. Toward the end of the piece, the dancers formed line after line, as if waiting for some salvation in the distant corner. There is something eternally patient about this piece, most beautifully embodied by Varone stalwart Eddie Taketa. He is a bastion of surety.