'American Idol' meets local dance: And the winner is...

A Portland choreographer takes a $10,000 prize at On the Board's A.W.A.R.D. Show, but the real prizes were sold-out houses and a chance to showcase regional talent.

'American Idol' meets local dance: And the winner is...
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Spider Kedelsky

A Portland choreographer takes a $10,000 prize at On the Board's A.W.A.R.D. Show, but the real prizes were sold-out houses and a chance to showcase regional talent.

With $10,000 up for grabs, one lucky  choreographer walked away very happy this past weekend. The A.W.A.R.D.  Show at On the Boards offered this bounty to the dancemaker whose work  won the prize after four nights of competition among 12 Northwest  dance troupes. Two runners-up received $1,000 each. All money awarded  is to go to creation of new work by these choreographers.

On each of the first three nights a  winner was chosen by audience members, who before casting their ballots  had the opportunity to witness and participate in a Q & A with the  artists. On the final evening, the three performed again, with the victor  crowned by the vote of the attending viewers, along with three local experts.

The A.W.A.R.D. Show is organized by  The Joyce Theater in New York, one of our country’s finest dance producers,  and is presented not only there but this year in five other American  cities. As originally conceived, the program had two goals: to serve as a vehicle  for developing new choreography, and to encourage dialogue between artists  and audiences.

The whole project is laudable — rife  with possibilities but also pitfalls, and all were on display during  the run of the shows. The virtues are numerous: four nights of sold-out  houses with engaged audiences; the opportunity for viewers to experience  a sampling of Northwest contemporary choreography; a showcase for Northwest  dancemakers and performers at one of our region’s finest small performance  venues (with $500 going to each participating group); marketing buzz  around the idea of competition for the artists and On the Boards; and  of course, the big enchilada of cash prizes.

The A.W.A.R.D. Show was presented  in Seattle for the first time last season at OTB, and though I only  attended two of the three programs, in general the quality of work seemed  stronger than this past weekend’s. The character of the works also  seemed to change, as this year’s artists seemed to feature more dance  theater, performance art, and multimedia works relying on props, film/video,  graphics of various kinds, florid costumes, and speaking voices rather  than an emphasis on exploring the possibilities for movement of the  human body. Seeing the performances raised anew the question of boundaries between  and definition of choreography, performance, and theater.

Among the stronger dances, and the winner  on Saturday, was The Offshore Project’s “The Buffoon,” with choreography  by Rainbow Fletcher, first seen last year in OTB’s Northwest New Works  series. In it a gang of four threatening figures pester a slight dancer  in white, who somehow always remains upright, though precariously so.  The evocative score by Dylan Rieck was performed live on-stage by a  gifted band of five musicians. The work, while still visually and kinetically  potent, lost some of the edge it had at its premiere, perhaps partly  as a result of cutting 3 minutes from it to meet the time constraints  imposed by The A.W.A.R.D. Show.

Zoe/juniper’s “A Crack in Everything"  (excerpt), the winner on Thursday, had a strong visual component, with  tracings in chalk on the back wall of the theater by dancer Zoe Scofield  outlining her movements; arresting ghost-like projected images of dancer  Raja Kelly; and long blood-red strings going from performer’s mouths  to an unseen place offstage. The three nights also saw some fine performing  from the likes of Sarah Ebert, Lauren Edson, Kelly Ann Barton, and Vincent  Lopez.

The whole A.W.A.R.D. Show venture provoked  thoughts about arts competitions, how to judge excellence, audience  education, and the American Idol-ization of our country. All good things  to discuss, but unfortunately none were really touched upon in the all-too-brief  question-and-answer session I witnessed.

Discussing dance, an ineffable  art form, has on the most profound level nothing to do with its performance.  What I heard asked and answered was mostly boilerplate, the things I  often hear before or after Q & As at other concerts.

Those who create dances can be eloquent  or not, and often speak about their work in terms of a “mythology”  or mindset they have created for it, rather than what they have  actually made. I’m not sure how it would have been structured, but  I would have enjoyed hearing audience voices as to why they voted for  the artists they did, as their participation was the reason for having  this competition.

I asked On the Boards artistic director  Lane Czaplinski what his goals were in bringing The A.W.A.R.D. Show  to Seattle. He mentioned two things: that he could not pass up  the chance to get that money for artists, and that the selection process,  in which 40 to 50 Northwest artists submitted their videos to a panel of  national experts, allowed these judges to see a wide variety of work  by our region’s contemporary choreographers.

Czaplinski also mentioned that he asked  the judges to consider Northwest choreographers’ work not solely on  their video submissions, but also for their potential to create new  work, as what was seen in the video might not be what they would present  at On the Boards.

He explained that the final night’s  vote to determine the winner was heavily skewed towards what the expert  judges thought, rather than the view of the audience, which collectively got only  one vote while the judges got three. This was a way to ensure some accountability  in consideration of the support Boeing and The Joyce have given to the  project. Perhaps that should be rethought and the ultimate champ is a result of a popular vote, as it was for the preceding three nights.

Whatever concerns one might have about  competition and how these shows are structured, the artists who participated  are fortunate that they have such champions as Mr. Czaplinski and On  the Boards.

Oh yeah, who won the whole thing? Portland’s  tEEth with the multimedia, sweet and sour “Home Made” about coupling,  choreographed by Angelle Hebert with live vocals from Luke Matter and  Cali Ricks.

A final note: For those who have not  had the opportunity to see performances at On the Boards, the organization  offers excellent videos. Go to www.OntheBoards.tv.

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