Dancing on the spiritual borders
Jennifer K Mahal
The names of the dances are as exotic as the locations that gave birth
to them -- butoh from Japan, bharatanatyam from Southern India, Moroccan
guedra and Uzbek classical dances from Uzbekistan.
“All these dances and music, what they have in common is their
spiritual basis,” Laurie Buenafe said. “So I see ‘Borderland’ as the
space between heaven and Earth.”
“Borderland,” a multicultural dance concert to be staged tonight at
Orange Coast College, is Buenafe’s dream -- actually it’s her senior
project for her world dance certificate. The concert will bring together
four world dance masters -- Ramaa Bharadvaj, Carolyn Krueger, Don McLeod
and Zahra Zuhair -- for a magic airline tour through Eastern lands.
A teacher at OCC, Bharadvaj started dances from the temples of South
India as a prodigy when she was 4. Bharadvaj and her daughter, Swetha,
will open the show with a bharatanatyam consecrating the space of the
college’s Dance Studio B.
“We are going to walk with flames,” Bharadvaj said, “because in Indian
culture, flames signify enlightenment. So we’re going to walk and form
the border of the dancing space. We’re going to define the space.”
The dance, which Bharadvaj choreographed, will also invoke
purification with holy waters.
Bharadvaj, who has had her own dance company for the past 15 years,
will also close out the evening’s performance with a dance celebrating
rhythm. In many world religions, the universe came into existence with
sound and with the first sound, started moving, she said.
“Through rhythm, we will make offerings to the divine and give thanks
for giving this gift,” Bharadvaj said.
That thread of spirituality will run through the entire program.
Krueger and her Gulistan Dance Theater, of which Buenafe is a member,
is setting Uzbek classical dances with Sufi poetry -- Islamic mystic
poetry.
Though not considered a Sufi dance, Krueger said mystical sentiment
underlies the spirit of the dances she choreographed. “All are spiritual
in nature but not blatant,” Krueger said.
The piece will be performed by troupe members Monica Ramos, Alana Reed
and Donna Speckman.
Krueger also plans to perform an interpretive dance from “Layla and
Majnun,” a Middle Eastern version of “Romeo and Juliet.”
“I just hope the audience will have the experience of what the dance
means to those of us who do it,” Krueger said, “how it affects our total
being and outlook on life, because it has really cemented a spiritual
connection to the world.”
McLeod feels that connection through doing butoh, a Japanese dance
form started in the late 1950s.
“Butoh is a very spiritual examination in the sense that the goal is
to become one with all things,” said McLeod, who learned the dance form
four years ago after having spent a career as a mime artist. He studied
with Marcel Marceau in the 1970s.
The dance -- which combines such elements as Kabuki and German
Expressionism -- is mostly improv. McLeod said he plans to listen to the
music, create a theme in his mind and then let his body speak.
“The pacing is extremely slow and quite interesting with all the
sound-byte type of technology” we have, he said, “People really embrace
butoh as a very refreshing art form, to have time almost halted.”
In a way, time has halted in Zuhair’s dancing. Zuhair will perform a
guedra, a dance of the Tuareg Berbers, the blue people of the Sahara,
which traces its origins back thousands of years.
The particular dance Zuhair will perform is a ritual to send blessings
and goodwill to the world.
The Tuareg “believe that it is their responsibility to send out all
these blessings and protection against evil in the world,” said Zuhair,
who has been performing this dance for 20 years. “They feel they have
direct contact to the spirit world through the elements of nature, that
they were born to this.”
Each of the performers will be accompanied by live music provided by
David Martinelli, Malek Vossough and members of UCLA’s Near Eastern
Ensemble. Original music by Buenafe and Maghan Ivey will also be
featured.
An open discussion with the choreographers will follow the
performance.
“Many times, you see this and come away with an exotic feeling,”
Bharadvaj said. “Some people [have an] understanding, some don’t, instead
looking at the bells and costumes.”
With “Borderlands,” the audience has the opportunity to interact with
the choreographers, ask questions and come away with a deeper
understanding, she said.
“I hope this will be an eye-opening experience for the audience,”
Bharadvaj said.
FYI
WHAT: “Borderland”
WHEN: 8 tonight
WHERE: OCC’s Dance Studio B, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
COST: $2-$5
CALL: (714) 791-1043 or (714) 432-5506, Ext. 1
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