Grupo Corpo evokes the lure of Brazil at Meany Hall

Superb performance and rich movement are the strengths of this 19-member company, which travels next to Portland on its U.S. tour.

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Spider Kedelsky

Superb performance and rich movement are the strengths of this 19-member company, which travels next to Portland on its U.S. tour.

Seeing Brazil’s Grupo Corpo at Meany  Hall last week (Feb. 3), back for their fifth visit, evoked memories  of the extraordinary dancing I saw in two trips to Brazil, most especially  Rio de Janiero, the countryside several hours distant, and the neighborhoods  of the northeastern city of Salvador, the center of Afro-Brazilian culture.

Whether spontaneously on the streets  or beautiful beaches, in parades and community social clubs, or as part  of the ceremonies of indigenous religions, dance was an integral part  of people’s lives, with multiple purposes and meanings. The ease and  freedom of bodies, and the collective celebratory nature of movement,  came as a revelation to me.

I was looking forward to my first viewing  of the 19-member company, which was founded in 1975 by its artistic director Paulo  Pederneiras, as over the years the buzz has been strong. And I wondered  how this contemporary dance troupe might link to the traditions and  movements of its complex and multi-ethnic country.

It didn’t take very long to find  out from the first piece, “Parabelo,” a 1997 work by the company’s  choreographer, and Paolo’s brother, Rodrigo Pederneiras — one that  he calls his “most Brazilian and regional creation.” The score by  Tom Zé and José Miguel was said to evoke “the pastoral side” of  Brazil, and the first image is of dimly lit bodies sitting on the stage  floor as if rooted to the earth. Rising, they soon take simple steps  right on the music’s beat, with swaying hips and supple backs conveying  a sense of the languorous walks one might find in the countryside.

As the work progressed, more of the  movement vocabulary was revealed, including body isolations playing one  part against another, small and rapid syncopated steps, turns, bent  legs lifted in the air drawn from ballet, and that undulating torso,  back to front and side to side, so typical of African-influenced dance  and often combined with the head briefly thrown back, an exultant punctuation  to the lively body.

The multi-sectioned score was meant  to “echo” devotional chants and is informed by baiao, rural  rhythms originally from the northeast of Brazil. The most appealing  and choreographically inventive sections of the piece were a striking  duet in which Helbert Pimenta, using only his right arm for almost the  entire time, ingeniously partners Silvia Gasparand, her feet barely  ever touching the ground and her body pitched out at various planes  to his. Rather than seeming manipulative, the imagination of the choreography  gave it a mesmerizing poetry. Another lovely section, a charming one  that most evoked rural folk idioms, had the performers entering as three  trios, each with their arms overlapping inventively, and embracing each  other in a show of communal cohesion.

Grupo Corpo is known not only for brilliant and exuberant dancing, but also for striking stage design. In  “Parabelo,” most exemplary were two sets of projections on the back  scrim by Fernando Velloso and Paulo Pederneiras. The first a set of  giant heads facing forward and back, the second a nostalgic montage  of what appeared to be real photos of people and events in rural life.  I don’t know what the heads meant to the designers, but for me they  were reminiscent of those on santos,  the wooden carvings of saints found in Spanish and Portuguese colonial  churches.

The second offering, after an intermission,  was 2009’s “Ima,” about the “interdependence and complementarity  of human relationships.” Its music by +2 had a jazzier sound than  the more folky “Parabelo,” but was similar to it in having a number  of predominantly percussive segments, rather than a connected thread  of sound.

The stage design by Pablo Pederneiras  was superb in its simplicity and allure. Over the course of the dance,  the side wings, back scrim and the dancing space itself were enveloped  in a shifting set of bright, distinctive colors that seemed to evoke  the many facets of the relationships being portrayed, with performers  dressed in simple costumes whose solid hues acted as counterpoint to  the lighting.

Superb performance and rich movement is the strength of this company. Judging only from these two works,  the choreography itself is not. Pederneiras sets out his intent for  each dance in the company’s program notes, and introduces them thematically  at the beginning of each work. For a good portion of both we get insinuations  of the concept within its formal structure.

At about the same point in each, maybe  two-thirds through, the choreographer goes a bit too movement-bonkers, and  the cohesion of the dance becomes chaos, and the works lose their way  as the dancers fly around the stage in a blaze of movement, in “Parabelo”  with colorful and busy costumes to match. Part of this may be the choreographer  becoming too enamored of his own movement, or perhaps too slavish to  the tyranny of the beats of the heavily percussive scores. Whatever  the cause, the works suffer from a collapse of clarity.

While I was initially intrigued by  the movement vocabulary, it became repetitious, perhaps intentionally  so in “Parabelo.” Many people opine that folk dances, most rural  in origin, can be more fun to do than to watch because of the limited  palette of steps. However, much of “Ima’s” movement and structure  seemed interchangeable with that of “Parabelo,” despite the fact  that they were different thematically and created 12 years apart.  In “Ima” I did sense the choreographer trying to stretch with certain  movements taken from other genres such as hip hop, but they didn’t  feel quite yet authentic to his style, as if he were trying them on for  size.

The Pederneiras brothers have created  an extraordinary company, one that is a pleasure to behold for its dancing  and design. If the show I saw is an indicator of their current repertoire,  then perhaps now might be a good time to bring in other voices to create  choreography that can expand their vision as a distinctive Brazilian  voice, and bring new challenges to their beautiful performers.

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