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NJ Star-Ledger
January 24, 2003
Isadora... No Apologies
By ROBERT JOHNSON
What: Isadora...No Apologies
Where: The Duke on 42nd Street, 229 West 42nd Street, New York
When: 8 p.m. January 29 through February 1; with matinees at 2 p.m.
February 2
How Much: Tickets are $25. Call (212) 239-6200
NEW YORKThe dances of Isadora Duncan are fleeting things. They
look so delicate and spontaneous that it seems a miracle they have endured
for a hundred years.
Duncan lived a life of exceptional substance, however. She preached
free love, and the liberation of the female body in an era of grinding
constraint; wrote inspirational tracts; and is credited with inventing
modern dance. She chose to inhabit a lofty plane, where philosophy,
art, and a spiritual approach to sex all came together; and she experienced
exaltation, and tragedy.
Isadora...No Apologies, a wondrous piece of dance-theater
that opened Wednesday at the Duke on 42nd Street, pays homage to the
Duncan legend, and shows the dances into which she poured her thought,
and energy. Yet paradoxically this show reconciles mind and body by
dividing the choreographer in two.
Lori Belilove, a renowned interpreter of Duncans repertoire, performs
her dances, matching their moods to episodes from the dancer's life.
Trading places with Belilove, actress Hope Garland recalls Duncan's
lapidary pronouncements amid text by Andrew Frank, who also directs
the show. While Belilove flutters, reclines voluptuously, and emotes,
Garland stakes out the moral high ground.
Actor Daryl Boling serves as a prop, impersonating a series of men from
an incredulous director who ejects Duncan from vaudeville to the dancers
three, principle lovers: stage designer Edward Gordon Craig, millionaire
Paris Singer, and the Russian poet Sergei Esenin. Voice-overs deliver
news reports, and supply additional characters as needed. Women and
children from the Isadora Duncan Dance Foundation, which Belilove directs,
help fill out the story.
A longtime student of Duncans method, Belilove has become increasingly
refined, to the point where she is now practically transparent. In this
regard, she does not resemble the fleshier Isadora, as much as she captures
her spirit.
Each of Beliloves gestures is exquisite, yet appears casual. In
the dance Narcissus, to Chopin, her hands move so softly
that they seem hardly able to displace the air; her steps appear too
light to leave an imprint. Her expression is ravishing. Beliloves
emotional vitality makes hefty dances, like Marche Heroique,
almost as convincing.
Meanwhile, Garland intones Duncans ringing principles: The
dance of the future is the measure of our personal freedom, she
declares. I am against marriage, and for the emancipation of women!
The play is sketchy, of necessity, presenting only the highlights. We
hear of Duncans triumph in Budapest; her passion for Craig; and
her grief over the death of her children. At times it seems Isadora...No
Apologies is too slight a vehicle to embrace Duncans magnificence.
Yet Beliloves gorgeous dancing, and even a sample of Duncan's
generous idealism ensure that audience members will emerge from the
theater feeling uplifted, as this courageous dancer would have wished.  |