In her substantial Balanchine biography, Jennifer Homans regales us with an encounter between the choreographer and a delegation from the Soviet Ministry of Culture during New York City Ballet’s epic 1962 tour of the USSR: “When [they] asked him, please, to cancel Episodes because ‘the people’ couldn't understand it, he responded succinctly with a Russian equivalent of ‘F**k you’ and walked out.” Russian audiences got it, and loved it.
Episodes, a stark work set to Webern’s pointillistic orchestral pieces, is back this fall and the people of New York greeted its thorny abstractions on opening night with joy. City Ballet fielded the big guns, starting with the mysterious, commanding Isabella LaFreniere and Olympian Chun Wai Chan. The ensemble made like flight deck personnel guiding fighter jets in for an arrested landing on an aircraft carrier. All coolly dispatched a cryptic semaphore, abrupt weight shifts, splayed-open shapes that suddenly turned inward, brittle extensions embellished with flexed feet, jutting hips and tilted heads. The classically disciplined geometries of a stately pavane flickered on and off like a strobe effect. LaFreniere’s intense yet faraway gaze suggested a preoccupation with cosmic issues. Chan slipped his arms under hers dispassionately like scaffolding.
The score alternately sang, squeaked, gleamed, whispered and blared, splintered by shards of silence. In ‘Five Pieces,’ Ashley Hod and Alec Knight had a tremendous outing, wanderers in Stygian shades skittering off-balance in tight spotlights. They flung their arms as if trying to get rid of incriminating evidence, their predicament encapsulated in the way she kept one foot flexed and pinned against the other ankle while he promenaded her around on pointe.
In ‘Concerto’, Alexa Maxwell disassembled the ‘Kitri jump’ and rebuilt it in myriad configurations à terre and en l’air, back arched and head flung back toward her raised foot. Taylor Stanley tried to keep her grounded, maneuvering her standing leg into various ungainly positions with his hands.
Serene resolution was found in Webern’s shimmering orchestration of Bach’s Ricercar a 6 from “The Musical Offering.” Mira Nadon and Adrian Danchig-Waring were haunting, ethereal presences backed by an ensemble impenetrably semaphoring in the background, sinking to their knees occasionally as if in church, fingertips to shoulders evoking broken wings.
Episodes sandwiched between Square Dance and Western Symphony, all 1950s vintage, underscored Balanchine’s embrace of a mythic idea of America. The beating heart of the program, though, remains the Russian imperial style, delivered at the speed of a 1957 Corvette. Square Dance was driven by dynamo Megan Fairchild, in her farewell season, still radiating delight in every audacious sequence of hops on pointe, consecutive pirouettes in retiré, and springy gargouillades, her feet whipping up tiny eddies in midair.