Tag Archives: Graham Studio Series

GrahamDeconstructed: THE RITE OF SPRING

Xin Ying and Lorenzo Pagano in Martha Graham’s The Rite of Spring (photo © Hubbard Nash Photography)

Who: Martha Graham Dance Company
What: Graham Studio Series: “GrahamDeconstructed”
Where: Martha Graham Studio Theater, 55 Bethune St., eleventh floor
When: Wednesday, March 13, and Thursday, March 14, $20-$30, 7:00
Why: Martha Graham’s ongoing Studio Series “GrahamDeconstructed” continues March 13 and 14 with a behind-the-scenes look at The Rite of Spring, which the company debuted in 1984. Graham had performed in the first American production of the work, by choreographer Léonide Massine and composer Igor Stravinsky, conducted by Leopold Stokowski, in 1930. More than fifty years later, she revisited the thirty-five-minute piece, and, for its fortieth anniversary, it will be part of the troupe’s upcoming season at City Center next month, along with Graham’s Appalachian Spring, Agnes de Mille’s Rodeo, and a world premiere by Jamar Roberts and Rhiannon Giddens. For “GrahamDeconstructed,” there will be a full rehearsal run-through of The Rite of Spring, which features two soloists (the Chosen One and the Shaman) and an ensemble of eighteen, with commentary from Graham experts and original cast members.

[Mark Rifkin is a Brooklyn-born, Manhattan-based writer and editor; you can follow him on Substack here.]

NEW@GRAHAM: AN EVENING WITH PONTUS LIDBERG

new at graham

Who: Pontus Lidberg, Kaitlyn Gilliland, Christopher Adams, Martha Graham Dance Company
What: Graham Studio Series: conversation, film screening, and live performance
Where: Martha Graham Studio Theater, 55 Bethune St. at Washington St., eleventh floor
When: Thursday, April 6, $20 in advance, $25 at the door, 7:00
Why: Last April, the Martha Graham Dance Company presented the world premiere of Swedish choreographer Pontus Lidberg’s Woodland, a co-commission with the Library of Congress. For the latest installment of the Graham Studio Series, Lidberg, who is also a filmmaker (The Rain, Labyrinth Within), will be at the company’s home on Bethune St. for a conversation about his work and to offer a sneak peek at his new film, the seventy-minute Written on Water, which stars Aurélie Dupont, former principal dancer and current director of the Paris Opera Ballet, with excerpts performed live by former New York City Ballet principal dancer Kaitlyn Gilliland (BalletNext, BalletCollective, Ballet Tech, Intermezzo Dance Company, and others) and Christopher Adams, current member of Zvidance, Susan Marshall and Company, and Pontus Lidberg Dance. In addition, the company will perform Woodland, which is set to reordered music by Irving Fine. The evening will be followed by a reception.

GrahamDeconstructed: CLYTEMNESTRA (ACT 2)

CLYTEMNESTRA

The Martha Graham Dance Company takes audiences behind the scenes of classic CLYTEMNESTRA this week (photo by Brigid Pierce)

GRAHAM STUDIO SERIES
Martha Graham Studio Theater
55 Bethune St., eleventh floor
Tuesday, October 4, and Wednesday, October 5, $25-$30, 7:00
marthagraham.org

The Martha Graham Dance Company has a special treat for dance fans this week when it opens the doors of its Bethune St. home for an open, ticketed rehearsal of its latest GrahamDeconstructed presentation, Clytemnestra Act 2. The 1958 masterpiece — and Graham’s only full-evening work — retells the Greek myth of the Trojan War from the point of view of the murderous title character. It features costumes by Graham and Helen McGehee, music by Halim El Dahm, and set design by Isamu Noguchi. The company will perform the second act, which takes place in Clytemnestra’s chambers; PeiJu Chien-Pott is Clytemnestra, with Ben Shultz as the ghost of Agamemnon, Xin Ying as Electra, Abdiel Jacobsen as Orestes, Lorenzo Pagano as Aegisthus, and Anne O’Donnell, Anne Souder, and Leslie Williams as the Furies; there will also be archival footage of Graham performing the title role. Part of the Graham Studio Series, GrahamDeconstructed offers inside looks at Graham classics, going behind the scenes of their history and creation, hosted by artistic director Janet Eilber.