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17th May 2012
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Flamenco Festival USA
Eva Yerbabuena
"5 Mujeres 5" (5 Women 5)"

Sunday, January 30th, 7:00pm.
City Center, New York City..

 

 

Coverage of the Festival Flamenco USA is sponsored by Arte Fyl Dance Shoes
 

Text : Mona Molarsky

White nightgowns, kudos for the messenger, mixed feelings about the message

Dancers: Eva Yerbabuena, Mercedes de Córdoba, Asunción Pérez, María Morena, Sonia Poveda, Luis Miguel González, Amador Rojas, Eduardo Guerrero, Juan Manuel Zurano. Musicians: Marta de Castro, soprano. Pepe de Pura, Enrique Soto, vocal. Paco Jarana, guitar. Antonio Coronel, percussion. Ignacio Vidaechea, saxophone, flute. Rafael de Utrera, vocal. Choreography & Direction: Eva Yerbabuena. Choreography (guest): Javier Latorre. Direction: Hansel Cereza. Music: Paco Jarana. Adaptation of popular lyrics: Arcángel, Segundo Falcón. Lighting: Raúl Perotti. Produced by Eva Yerbabuena, S.L.. Raquel Domínguez, wardrobe.

Any modern person who falls in love with flamenco must have moments when they feel split down the middle. There are those nights when the insistent notes of a guitar and the singer's elemental voice transport you to a realm as ancient and mysterious as Stonehenge. And then there are those mornings, when, grabbing your cell phone, and checking your watch as you rush for a train, you are convinced that you have been seduced by an absurd vision. In the clear light of day, it is suddenly so obvious that flamenco has nothing, absolutely nothing to do with modern life, as you know it. Seesawing between these two experiences is enough to make anyone schizophrenic.

So it must be with Eva Yerbabuena, whose flamenco ballet, 5 Women 5 seems at once to embrace flamenco and deconstruct it. Did she consciously intend it as a deconstructionist piece, or is it simply the outgrowth of a deeper splintering? It's hard to say. Her controversial work, which has won both praise and scorn in Europe, had its New York City premiere to a sold out house at the City Center Theater on Sunday, January 30th. Judging by the audience's final warm applause, it would seem that Yerbabuena's stage presence and exceptional talent largely overcame any doubts the public might have had about the work's choreography and content.

The City Center's famous red curtain was already raised on a dark stage, when the New York audience filed into the theater, chatting and exchanging kisses with old friends. Suddenly, the house lights went down and the chatter hushed. Two female figures and an upholstered, white chair were spotlighted on stage. Then, just as suddenly, the scene went black. Far off, the stomping of heels could be heard, and as its volume increased, a strobe light caught fragments of figures moving across a plane. The vignette was punctuated with a black silence. Next: the image of a woman in white, sitting on a chair under the spotlight, and a line of white-gowned women, posed like statues, while a soprano's high, angelic voice soared over their heads. The women began to walk, taking the slow, calculated steps of modern dancers, until they formed a line facing the audience. Then Paco Jarana's guitar kicked in, and the women glided, slowly, majestically, into a sort of modernist pavane.

 

It’s suddenly obvious that flamenco has nothing, absolutely nothing to do with modern life, as you know it.

The flamenco ballet had begun. Or so one might expect. But there was something slightly off, even from the start. First, there were those dumpy, unconstructed white gowns, worn by Yerbabuena and the women in her company. If the show were being performed at an outdoor flamenco festival in Spain, the old grandmothers sitting on folding chairs near the back would have been whispering, "Aye, Matilde, what are those girls wearing? I think they're in their underwear!" "No, Eulalia, those are nightgowns. It's the latest thing!" But, shhhh! Back there! Stop the gossip and let the show go on!

Like the women, the male members of the company were dressed in white: white pants, white jackets and loose white shirts. While the women suggested muses in sleepwear, the men conjured up sailors from Caribbean ports. Both groups moved with a perfect, soulless precision that allowed for no individuality--a flamenco version of the corps du ballet in traditional ballet blanc.

Yerbabuena's musicians were one of the production's strengths. Paco Jarana's guitar could be traditionally rhythmic and lyrical, or jazzy and up-to-the minute. Antonio Coronel on percussion and Ignacio Vidacchea on flute and saxphone added bright notes to the fusion elements that are currently so de rigueur. But it was the strong singing, most notably by Rafael de Utrera and Enrique Soto (from the great Sordera clan of Jerez), that grounded the show within a tradition and gave it emotional weight. If only they'd had more to work with. In keeping with the program's fragmented esthetic, classic flamenco forms--a soleá apola-caña and a minera, for example--were jammed up against free form riffs and sometimes shattered beyond recognition. "Was that the minera?" a disgruntled flamenca sitting next to me whispered, at one point, "I would never have guessed!"

Yerbabuena used her company as a unit, moving the dancers across the stage in jazzy architectural blocks, arms raised over heads, hands rotating or fingers snapping--choreographic clichés that may have been fresh on Broadway at the birth of West Side Story but reached their flashy apogee in the nineteen-nineties, with the Las Vegas-style choreography of Joaquín Cortés.

Like a rag doll on a string…animated by another power, helpless to still her feet.

Yet something different seemed to be happening here. While her company moved in perfect, Busby-Berkeley unison, Yerbabuena fell out of sync. She staggered, started to fall, clutched her head in consternation. Later, she fell to the floor, got herself up, back into compás, then stumbled again.

She seemed exhausted, barely able go on. Yet, still she kept dancing, forced on by the propulsive rhythms of the guitar, drums and palmeros. Like a rag doll on a string--she appeared animated by another power, helpless to still her feet. An updated version of the girl in The Red Shoes, Yerbabuena seemed doomed to dance herself to death.

In the back of my mind, I heard the chorus of little grandmothers on their folding chairs. "Aye, Matilde! What's happening to the chica?" "I don't know, Eulalia, maybe she's sick!" "Sick? No, she's been drugged! One of those bad flamenco boys dropped something into her café con leche, just before the show!"

What was happening indeed? I spent the next half-hour pondering the question, as Yerbabuena danced her way through a breakdown of epic proportions. This was something different and bigger than the traditional theatrical heartbreaks of love and death. Flamenco, of course, has its own vocabulary for expressing loneliness, pain and grief. When it comes to these emotions, flamenco may well be the most expressive language on earth. Yet Yerbabuena wasn't speaking flamenco at all. Instead, she seemed to have rejected all dance idioms. It appeared that she was falling apart, right there in front of us, on stage.

As her four male dancers executed yet another round of masculine lunges and turns, a theory took shape in my head. Perhaps our heroine was suffering from an excess of machismo surrounding her in the society at large. It was overpowering and all-encompassing, something she couldn't escape from, a giant wave pulling her under--only to fling her up again, mercilessly, on the sand. And, if this were the case, what a terrible situation for a flamenco woman to be in. Betrayed by her world, her artistic language, her own tradition.

Different and bigger than the traditional theatrical heartbreaks of love and death.

Then again, maybe it wasn't machismo that had knocked the diminutive Yerbabuena down, but the strange, harsh disjunction between the flamenco life and our clock-driven, electronic world. The shock, perhaps, had coalesced for her into a kind of poisonous acid. As we watched, the invisible fluid was creeping across the floorboards of the stage, seeping into the leather of her beautifully-crafted shoes, coursing through her blood stream, forcing her on and on with this dance of St. Vitus.

"Aye, Matilde! The things young people suffer through these days. They've got problems with names we've never even heard of! No, I wouldn't be young again for a million euros."

There was another blackout. A disembodied voice spoke lines of poetry. Then Yerbabuena appeared center stage, in a pool of light, her footwork a delicate zapateado that slowly gained in urgency. Men in satin-trimmed jackets and women in satin aprons moved upstage and down, in perfect compás, falling into poses, assuming the required attitudes. Yerbabuena was in perfect compás too, but she acted like she had been stabbed. She staggered and tottered backward. Men and women grabbed at her, but she pushed them away. Suddenly, a hoarse and piercing, "Nooooooo!" was wrenched from her throat, bringing everything to a stop. In the moment of silence that followed, Yerbabuena walked off stage.

The guitars and percussion launched into a bossa nova-inflected fantasy that morphed into tangos. Within minutes, she was back in the center spotlight, dressed in black with a bolero jacket, trimmed in gold. An amazing and inexplicable transformation seemed to have taken place. As she pulled her small figure to its full height and stood, looking up into the lights, Yerbabuena appeared at once vulnerable and steely. And it seemed to me that for one fleeting moment, the memory of Carmen Amaya glided, like the shadow of an eagle, across the stage.

The strange, harsh disjunction between the flamenco life and our clock-driven, electronic world.

So began Yerbabuena's seguiriya, the evening's finest moment. As Enrique Soto split the silence with his powerful cry, she reached her arms up, in a gesture of humility that asked the blessing of those who had come before. Then, head bowed, arms and shoulders raised, she curled in on herself, as if searching for the thread that would lead to the music's core.

It takes courage to stand so simply and alone on a vast stage--courage to wait without attitude for the spirit of the song to descend. Solo, without her company, Yerbabuena at last seemed ready to begin her hardest task, to make art that could move an audience. With her beautiful, old-style arm work, whose impulse seemed to rise from the solar plexus, she did not disappoint. And when she gathered her skirts, and slowly circled the stage tapping out a complex but gentle storm of zapateado on the burnished floor, I knew I was in the presence of a true artist.

Around me, many in the theater seemed to have reached a consensus. And at the end they gave her a standing ovation. Olé for Yerbabuena, the dancer! As for the choreography, that was another story. As one New York flamenco veteran put it for many, "I liked the messenger, but not the message."

But what would the little grandmothers be saying? When I listened hard, I was sure that I could hear them somewhere in the distance: "Matilde, my dear, I told you that girl could dance!" "Aye, Eulalia! She's a credit to her mother. And her father too. And the aunts and uncles. And the grandparents. And all her ancestors…and ours… may they rest in peace!"

by Mona Molarsky @2005. All rights reserved.

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