Heidi Duckler Dances Into 39th Year in the Light of the Harvest Moon

With immersive magic, Heidi Duckler Dance celebrated its 39th year with a site specific dance perfomance and gala last Saturday with signature impressive original style.

The excitingly innovative dance company is known for site-specific perfromances, and this one, held the the Frank Gehry-designed outdoor space of the Loyola Law School Campus, was stunning. The performance, Dance in the Light of the Harvest Moon was an hour long extravaganza of swirling and galvanizing dance.

 

Featuring live saxophone and cello, dancers in stunning fish head costumes wove from plaza area to ascending stairwells, parking garage ramps, and beside a spectacularly lit purple and green tree. Why fish? Renowned architecht Gehry was known to love fish, and the campus was designed, Gehry himself as said, as a kind of stage set,  “…a little village of buildings around a main plaza…with character and diverse structures.” The buildings served here as a contained aquarium of sorts, aswim with lights, music, and dancers who moved, literally and figuratively “upstream” and circled vibrantly hued buildings.

Along with Duckler’s innovative hand overseeing all,  Madison Olandt, and Aleks Perez choreographed and directed. The
original collaborative piece School of Fish, created by transdisciplinary choreographer Shoji Yamasaki, was a highlight. Skilled visual artist and costume designer Snezana Saraswatic Petrovic created stunning costumes for the event, creating fish heads from plastic zip ties for the dancers, and dressing them in shiny, supple scaly-gloves, fabrics, and sparkly shoes. Costumes, music, and sinuous, ecstatic dance moves all combined with super views of the DTLA skyline for an ecstatic night of dance.

Audience members were treated to charcuterie platters and cocktails, a gala awards ceremony at which Duckler introduced her successsor as artistic director for coming years, Raymond Ejiofor, preceding the dance performance.

The performance moved from plaza to outdoor stairs, from ghostly figures in a kind of underworld to fish-head shimmring swimmers, goddess Diana-like huntresses under illuminated trees, and a final multi-level work that had audience members following the fish-head-wearing dancers up five levels of the school’s parking garage, with costumed saxophonist and bubble machines a part of the delightful finale.

That final piece ended on the rooftop amid the shimmering downtown lights with a silent auction, live band, and buffet tables.  With audience members makng their way home at last to dream of dancing fish and moonlight seranades.

 

  • Genie Davis; photos by Genie Davis and Jack Burke

 

Heidi Duckler’s Site Specific Dance Classic: Parts & Labor

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“At the car wash…talking about the car wash…” that’s what audiences will be doing on Saturday, May 7th, when the Heidi Duckler Dance Theatre stages a classic dance performance at the Santa Palm car wash in West Hollywood.

Presented in part with a grant from  City of West Hollywood and its Arts and Cultural Affairs Commission through WeHo Arts (www.weho.org/arts), and support from Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, this exciting piece features four dancers staged on a vintage 1970s Cadillac Coupe de Ville. The Cadillac is more than a stage and a prop – the percussion trio Antenna Repairman will be miking it and using the car as an instrument, too.

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Heidi Duckler Dance Theatre creates deeply innovative dance experiences in non-traditional, site-specific locations, inviting its audience and artists to connect with their community in a fresh way. Duckler founded the troop in 1985, and the choreographer has earned the moniker “reigning queen of site specific performance.” Each staging is a contemporary art experience that integrates audience and performers.

Duckler has created more than 200 dance pieces around the world, receiving awards from the City of L.A. Department of Cultural Affairs, the California Arts Council, and the National Endowment of the Arts. With original percussionists Bob Fernandez and MB Gordy of Antenna Repairman still performing, Duckler felt the time was right to re-stage “Parts & Labor.”

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Originally performed in 1993, “Parts & Labor” explores our love/hate relationship with cars, and our dependency on them. The theme is more timely than ever, as LA highways grow increasingly congested and alternative transportation becomes more and more relevant. The piece was originally performed in a Studio City car lot, where dancers performed on an amplified Cadillac, a used car salesman tried to sell Caddys to the audience, and vintage film clips of Detroit’s view of the future screened in the background.

Percussionist Fernandez came up with the original idea to mic the car as a resonant instrument after visiting Cuba and noting the metal in pre-60s era vehicles driven there.

The 1992 performance featured four women in long black veils cradling gas pump nozzles, then changing into doctors’ scrubs, with the Cadillac going into labor and giving birth to a hood ornament. The current iteration will focus on the car as a symbol of freedom, as well as having the potential for entrapment.

“We live in our cars,” Duckler notes. “The car is our home.”

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This Saturday’s car wash location should also add a new look to the piece. “It’s more about relationships,” Duckler relates.

Combining exciting rhythm with progressive dance in a wide range of local settings is hardly a first for Duckler, who has been creating pieces and setting them in locales from the Los Angeles River basin to laundromats for decades.

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Check out her new vision for “Parts & Labor” this weekend, and be prepared for one “driving” evening of stellar dance and riveting rhythm.

“Parts & Labor” will be performed May 7, 2016, at 8 p.m. in the Santa Palm Car Wash, located at 8787 Santa Monica Blvd. in West Hollywood.

See http://bit.ly/hddtpartsandlabor for more information and to purchase tickets. Tickets will be available at the door as well, until sold out.

Visit http://www.heididuckler.org/ for more information about the full range of programming planned by this innovative dance group.