Festival’s
23rd edition raises a record $585,045
Annual
event produced by and benefiting Dancers Responding to AIDS,
a program
of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS
A bright
summer sun shimmered across the Great South Bay as renowned dance companies,
acclaimed choreographers and three standing-room-only audiences came together
at this year’s Fire Island Dance Festival on July 14-16, 2017.
The 23rd edition of the fundraising and cultural event of the Fire Island
summer raised a record $585,045 for Dancers Responding to AIDS, a
program of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS.
The
sold-out festival, in Fire Island Pines, NY, included the world premieres of
five works. Since the festival began in 1995, 61 works have premiered at Fire
Island Dance Festival (#fidance).
This
exhilarating weekend of dance set a fundraising record for the seventh year in
a row. In its 23 editions, Fire Island Dance Festival has raised
more than $5.5 million to ensure the most vulnerable among us in New
York and across the country have access to lifesaving medications,
counseling, healthy meals and supportive housing.
This
year’s festival was hosted by beloved Broadway leading lady Cady Huffman,
best known for her Tony Award-winning turn as Ulla in the megahit musical The
Producers and for bringing her signature sass to the judging table on Food
Network’s Iron Chef America.
The
festival’s five premieres were choreographed by Al Blackstone, who most
recently choreographed the acclaimed off-Broadway hit The View Upstairs;
Ronald K. Brown, founder and artistic director of EVIDENCE, A Dance
Company; Lorin Latarro, who choreographed Broadway’s Waitress and
2016 revival of Les Liaisons Dangereuses; Pontus Lidberg, a
celebrated Swedish choreographer, filmmaker and dancer who founded Pontus
Lidberg Dance; and Manuel Vignoulle, a French ballet and contemporary
choreographer who has performed and choreographed pieces around the world.
With two
performances on Saturday, July 15, and one on Sunday, July 16, the festival
featured 10 unique companies that spanned a diverse range of styles from ballet
to Broadway:
Havana, Cuba’s Acosta Danza, led by
dance legend Carlos Acosta, presented For Us, a mesmerizing
ballet that explored the passion, frustration and sadness of a couple in love.
Dancers Mario Sergio Elías and Raul Reinoso expressed this tragic
love story through graceful, delicate movement as they intimately entwined
their bodies, only to ultimately break apart. This landmark performance marked
Acosta Danza’s US premiere.
Fire
Island Dance Festival favorite Al Blackstone
choreographed a sexy and darkly comedic piece set to Prince’s “How Come U Don’t
Call Me Anymore.” When the object of American Ballet Theatre principal dancer James
Whiteside’s affection ignores his advances, he rhythmically and
methodically eliminates the five men who stand in his path as distractions. The
piece elicited nervous laughter as Whiteside flirtatiously and maniacally
sauntered, leaped and slayed across the stage in this sultry jazz number.
Makers
Dance Company, created by artistic director Alexandre Hammoudi,
premiered Tatakai, a piece inspired by the great samurai battle of
Sekigahara. Featuring Hammoudi, an American Ballet Theatre soloist, and an
ensemble of six members of American Ballet Theatre’s corps de ballet, the
warriors exhibited classical ballet bravura, accentuated by the strength of man
resisting dark forces and rising above circumstances in triumph. The piece was
choreographed by Manuel Vignoulle.
Caleb
Teicher & Company presented an excerpt of Meet Ella, an ode to the
queen of jazz, Ella Fitzgerald. Brian Lawton and Caleb Teicher
created a modern twist to Fitzgerald’s legendary recordings by energetically
exploring a range of soft-shoe tap with classic swing movement. This energizing
male duo was choreographed by Nathan Bugh and Teicher.
Peridance Contemporary Dance Company shared an excerpt of Dia-Mono-Logues,
which was inspired by artistic director and choreographer Igal Perry’s
experiences emigrating from Israel to New York City in the turbulent 1970s.
Eight dancers expressed internal and external monologues with urgency and
elegance, culminating in the moment when the ensemble is liberated, throwing
their flowing sheer cardigans into the air.
Pontus
Lidberg Dance presented the stirring contemporary piece A Different Passion,
in which Barton Cowperthwaite and Pontus Lidberg prop each other
up in moments of vulnerability. The pair used the strength of their bodies and
beautiful lines in interesting, unexpected ways, as they expressed the pain of
heartbreak.
Broadway choreographer Lorin Latarro (Waitress)
premiered For Those Before, in which gay men and women reflected
longingly on relationships of their youth. A multigenerational cast of nine
dancers seamlessly moved between the past and present through stunning movement
and exceptional, touching storytelling.
Miami City Ballet presented two pieces. Saturday’s performances
featured Chutes and Ladders by Justin Peck, while Sunday’s
audience experienced George Balanchine’s “My One And Only” variation from Who
Cares?. In Chutes and Ladders, celebrated ballet performers Jeanette
Delgado and Kleber Rebello showed refined technique and exquisite
partnering in this remarkable piece by the wunderkind choreographer. On Sunday,
the effervescent Delgado, in sparkling blue, was matched by the picturesque
backdrop of the Great South Bay in one of ballet’s most iconic pieces, set to
music by George Gershwin.
EVIDENCE, A Dance Company premiered a solo excerpt from New
Conversations: Ochosi Is Here, which will debut next year at Jacob’s Pillow
dance festival. The piece, performed by Keon Thoulouis, was inspired by
Ochosi, an orisha or god in Afro-Cuban folklore, as he connects believers to
justice. The piece expertly combined traditional grounded and rhythmic African
dance with contemporary storytelling.
Rashaun Mitchell and Silas Riener, modern
dancers who began collaborating after years with Merce Cunningham Dance
Company, performed Desire Liar, which premiered at Vail International
Dance Festival in 2015. This engaging duet was punctuated with sharp staccato
movement. Their effortless ability to flow in and out of synchronicity paired
nicely with Brooklyn Rider’s brisk score.
Monica
Bill Barnes & Company kicked off the festival on
Friday, July 14, with two quirky and uniquely comedic performances, which
delighted and thrilled the audience. Surprising gestures in I Feel Like juxtaposed
with the vulnerability of Anna’s Interview took the audience on an
unexpected journey of emotions. This exclusive performance, sponsored by
DIRECTV, was part of the opening event for the festival's Leadership
Supporters.
Fire
Island Dance Festival is
generously sponsored by The New York Times, United Airlines, DIRECTV,
Sayville Ferry and Tony’s Barge Inc.
Tom Viola
and Denice Richards of BCEFA
Dancers
Responding to AIDS, founded in 1991 by former Paul Taylor Dance
Company members Denise Roberts Hurlin and Hernando Cortez, relies on the
extraordinary compassion and efforts of the performing arts community to fund a
safety net of social services for those in need. As a program of Broadway
Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, DRA supports more than 450 AIDS and family service organizations
in all 50 states as well as the essential programs of The Actors Fund,
including the HIV/AIDS Initiative and The Dancers' Resource.
For more
information, please visit Dancers Responding to AIDS at dradance.org,
on Facebook at facebook.com/DRAdance,
on Twitter at twitter.com/DRAdance, on
YouTube at youtube.com/DRAdance and on
Instagram at instagram.com/DRAdance.