6
Mar/22

SARA MEARNS: PIECE OF WORK

6
Mar/22

SARA MEARNS: PIECE OF WORK
Joyce Theater
175 Eighth Ave. at 19th St.
March 8-13, $10-$71
212-645-2904
www.joyce.org
saramearns.com

During the pandemic lockdown, I covered more than a thousand online events created since March 2020. I had many favorite performers over those nearly two years, from actress Kathleen Chalfant and musician Richard Thompson to Arlekin Players Theatre and White Snake Projects to dancer-choreographer Jamar Roberts and Stars in the House hosts Seth Rudetsky and James Wesley. You can check out them and other stalwarts in twi-ny’s three-part Pandemic Awards.

But for me no one stood out like Sara Mearns. The extraordinary New York City Ballet principal dancer expanded her horizons in a series of breathtaking performances, including her Le Cygne (The Swan) variation for Swans for Relief, the Works & Process commission Storm, Lee Mingwei and Bill T. Jones’s durational Our Labyrinth at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Justin Peck’s Thank You, New York for the New York City Ballet New Works Festival, Christopher Wheeldon’s The Two of Us for Fall for Dance, L.A. Dance Project’s Sonata for Saras (Mearns as her own trio!), Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman’s Another Dance Film shot at the East River Park Amphitheater, and Molissa Fenley’s State of Darkness solo onstage at the Joyce.

Austin Goodwin’s carefully is part of Sara Mearns program at the Joyce (photo by Drew Dawson)

But in October 2021, Mearns had to take a break to deal with a personal issue she eventually discussed on social media several months later: She was diagnosed with depression and extreme burnout and was getting help from a sports psychologist. “This is never something I saw happening to me,” she wrote on Instagram. “I thought I was invincible, that maybe I was just tired, that maybe it’s just a phase, and to get over it. I’m here to tell you it’s a very real thing,”

From March 8 to 13, Mearns will return to performing, and to the Joyce, with her own program, “Piece of Work,” a kind of coming-out, coming-back party in which she will perform with eight dancers in works by six choreographers, including five world or NYC premieres created specifically for Mearns. “I have been lucky enough to perform in the biggest houses in the world, doing grand productions, pouring my heart out. It’s what comes naturally to me. It doesn’t feel like a risk,” she explains in a program note. “Three years ago, I decided it was time to go a different route, a route that was vulnerable for me artistically and that would be the biggest challenge for me thus far in my career. . . . I would like to say that I curated this evening, but the truth is, New York did. It will be raw, honest, and at times messy.”

The evening begins with Jodi Melnick’s Opulence, a duet with Melnick commissioned for the 2019 Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, with music by drummer Kid Millions and guitarist Zach Lehrhoff. Choreographer and director Austin Goodwin’s film carefully pairs Mearns with Paul Zivkovich inside an empty house. Mearns teams with Vinson Fraley Jr. in Fraley’s On the Margins, set to an original score by Rahm Silverglade for violin, electronics, guitar, and sax.

Following intermission, Mearns will perform with Melnick, Taylor Stanley, Jaquelin Harris, Chalvar Monteiro, and Burr Johnson in a special JoycEvent, excerpts from “Night of 100 Solos: A Centennial Event” and other works by Merce Cunningham, arranged and staged here by Rashaun Mitchell and Silas Riener, featuring live music by John King. Beth Gill’s SSSara is a solo for Mearns with music by Ryan Seaton. The night concludes with Guillaume Côté’s Spir, a duet with the Canadian dancer and choreographer set to German pianist, producer, and composer Nils Frahm’s “Corn” and Woodkid and Frahm’s “Winter Morning I.” In between each piece will be audio interludes directed and edited by Ezra Hurwitz.

Mearns also wrote on Instagram, “This show has been thru so many lives, revisions, faces, versions, and I wouldn’t take any of it back. A big influence was the pandemic; it gave me a clear path of what I wanted this show to be about. I’m not the same person or artist I was before the pandemic, and I wanted the evening to reflect that & acknowledge it. How art, specifically dance, is created in New York; what artists go thru in New York is unlike anywhere else in the world.” Mearns will talk about that and more in a curtain chat at the March 9 show.