Close

Not a member yet? Register now and get started.

lock and key

Sign in to your account.

Account Login

Forgot your password?

The Washington Post on VelocityDC

05 Oct News | Comments
The Washington Post on VelocityDC

The Washington Post’s Rebecca Ritzel declares the first annual VelocityDC Festival a smashing success in her October 5th, 2009 article, “Troupes Step Lively at the VelocityDC Festival”:

“If the immediate goal of the VelocityDC Dance Festival was to give local companies a high-impact, high- speed boost, then call this first annual event a success. Friday and Saturday at the Harman Center for the Arts, more than 1,500 people paid $15 to see seven troupes perform on an enormous stage. Odds are, they liked some or all of what they saw.

The whole affair was festive in the best of ways. At 5:30 each evening, Austrian choreographer Willi Dorner and 16 dancers delighted (or perplexed) pedestrians with a series of human sculptures scattered all over Penn Quarter. A DJ spun tunes at the Harman and the bar stayed open late, encouraging patrons to linger at the theater.

The actual performances? Oh, yes. Outstanding … choreographer Gesel Mason and Peter DiMuro, director of Dance/Metro DC, broke the ice with their comic duet “How to Watch a Modern Dance.” Flamenco dancer Edwin Aparicio and his band brought the Latin heat. CityDance Ensemble took the biggest risk of the night, restaging “Last Look,” an apocalyptic thriller by modern master Paul Taylor.

Former local choreographer Nejla Yatkin delivered an excerpt from “Wallstories,” a new work her feisty young dancers will perform in full Monday night at theMillennium Stage. Also in from New York to bolster the program: Ron K. Brown’s Evidence dance company.

The Washington Ballet closed out the show with Edward Liang’s “Wunderland,” a suite set to music by Philip Glass…  solid evidence that while great companies pass through Washington each month, some darn good dancers choose to stay.”

Read Ritzel’s original review online at The Washington Post.

 


Leave a comment