Alvin Ailey show brings flashes of the past, and thoughts about the company's future

The dance troupe's signature piece, 'Revelations,' is in its 50th year and touring the country with great success. But to move forward, the company needs to broaden its repertoire.

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Spider Kedelsky

The dance troupe's signature piece, 'Revelations,' is in its 50th year and touring the country with great success. But to move forward, the company needs to broaden its repertoire.

While watching dances there  are times when memories intrude insistently if not always accurately,  reminding you of what was seen before and coloring your vision of the  present. Such was the case as I watched “Revelations,” the eternal  masterpiece created by Alvin Ailey in 1960, and performed at the 5th Avenue Theatre this past weekend (March 25-27) by the company he created in 1958,  the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.

Sitting in the audience prior  to the curtain going up for “Revelations,” the anticipation in the  house was palpable, as if some sacred event was about to unfold  on the holy ground of the theater’s stage. This is the impact the  dance has on its viewers. There is special reverence for a work that  in its three segments set to a song-score of 10 traditional spirituals  (profoundly moving all on their own) evokes the African-American experience  in our country.

I have seen “Revelations”  performed many times over the years, but it imprinted itself on me in  the late 1960s, when I must have seen it a dozen times or more, sometimes  with a live chorus. I had not been to an Ailey company concert for some  time and as the dance unfolded before my eyes and I witnessed this generation  of performers, I also had a profound response as my mind and my body  remembered those seen in the past.

Here was the young Dudley  Williams of many years ago performing the beautiful solo “I  Wanna Be Ready,” and as he twisted and turned and rose and fell on  stage, so did I in my seat, almost involuntarily. There was the majestic  Consuelo Atlas, sadly passed on, and the tall and elegant Kelvin Rotardier,  intimate partners in the exquisite duet, “Fix Me, Jesus.”

The current company does the  work justice as it celebrates its 50th anniversary. This is a hard thing  to do as the piece appears on almost every program in home seasons and on-tour, and these dancers are far removed from the time in which the work  was created and originally performed. If one were seeing the company  for the first time there would be ample reason to be thrilled with its  performance.

Yet there were things missing  for me that made “Revelations” such a special experience in those  early years — the authority and presence of the dancers, and their  sense of communitas in performance. Many of them had personally experienced  what the dance was meant to evoke, and though they might not have had  the technical fluency of today’s company, they had a certain gravitas  and sensuality. They punctuated their movement, giving it nuance, character  and fullness.

“Revelations” is the signature  piece of the Ailey company, and among the most revered and viewed of  all American concert dances. Over the years the company seems  to have wanted to perform it less often, but without success in doing  so. Under its new artistic director Robert Battle (succeeding current  artistic director Judith Jamison this July) I hope the troupe  develops new repertoire that allows for programs that don’t include  “Revelations.” This masterwork has been present in the great majority  of the Ailey company performances for the past 50 years. Can the  company grow and prosper if it does so for the next 50?

I went to the concert  not to see “Revelations” but because of my interest  in the work of Ronald K. Brown, a choreographer who was considered by  many as a strong candidate to succeed Jamison but chose to opt out of  the running for the job. His “Dancing Spirit” for nine performers  was created in 2009 as a tribute to Jamison, a former star dancer  with the company. The lead male and female are said to represent Jamison  and Ailey, the others those who have followed in their paths.

It opens with a striking  diagonal procession led by Renee Robinson, with one dancer leaving the  stage as another enters. There follows a series of movement segments  suggesting a ritual, perhaps one of passage, very reminiscent of those  in African-influenced religions such as Candomble from Brazil, or Cuban  Santeria.

Here and there one sees  some clever riffs on “Revelations” itself, and there is some lovely  dancing by Glenn Allen Sims as the Ailey figure, but particularly by  the tall and strongly built Yannick Lebrun, who of all the dancers best  evoked the vigor and multidimensionality of African dance.

I was most impressed  by Brown’s use of a pared down vocabulary often repeating movement  phrases, sometimes with subtle shades of difference so that you begin  to see them in new ways as the dance progresses.

The collage score combines  Duke Ellington and Wynton Marsalis with Radiohead and War. Going from  one to another makes for a jarring progression at times, but one soon  enough gets carried away by the fullness of the movement and the drive  of the music.

The Ailey performance opened  with “Uptown,” a work also from 2009 by former company member  Matthew Rushing. It is an exposition in nine segments on the Harlem  Renaissance through spoken word, photographic slides, and dances. This  earnest but creaky work, more a lecture demonstration than a concert  performance, might have found a better home in a high school  or college than on the stage of the 5th Avenue.

The narrator/guide was a quite  credible Amos J. Machanic, Jr., whose light and lithe dance moves brightened  this work, as did his full-out dancing in “Rocka My Soul in the Bosom  of Abraham,” the concluding section of “Revelations.”

The written program included  extensive notes on the sources of period music for “Uptown.” The  same could not be said for the magnificent singing of the spirituals  in “Revelations.” We get credits for the arrangements but none for  the vocalists.

The 2010-11 Ailey season celebrates  the 50th anniversary of the premiere of “Revelations”  at the 92nd Street YM-YWHA in New York City. A short film on the dance  was commissioned by the company for the occasion and was shown on-stage  immediately prior to its live performance. It might have been better  used in the lobby on video monitors, as the dance ably speaks for itself.

However, thankful for small  favors we get a brief glimpse of Alvin Ailey himself performing in a  segment of “Revelations” done for a television show in the 1960s.  Even on blurry black and white film, with his incredible undulating  torso you could see what a wonderful dancer he was.

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