ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, October 21, 1980 Page 5 Dancers leap By AUDREY KRASNOW Officially formed in 1978 by director Christopher Watson and assistant irector Kathleen Smith, Dance eatre 2 and Dance Theatre Studio form a microcosm of the dance com- pany/dance school combination typical of major national dance companies. Many of the instructors for Dance Theatre Studio are dancers in DT2. Asa one who taken classes through the studio, Saturday evening's chamber concert of Dance Theatre 2 seemed like a small recital for a few close friends. Performed in the dance studio where classes are usually held, dance students omprised a large part of the 45 or so people who viewed the dances from the dance floor itself. The atmosphere was one of intimacy and warmth. Watson has trained with the Chicago Ballet, the Chicago Moving Co., Merce Cunningham and the Jeoffrey Ballet School, and has also earned an MFA for the ,U of M School of Music. As product of all of this training, Watson's choreography is of the purer modern ype, marked by difficult-to-sustain, adagios, contractions and curved, grounded movements. Through his choreography, he does not try to tell a story but,' rather he creates a mood or ex- presses a feeling. Saturday's piece Facade conveyed a bright mood with an undercurrent of teasing. Danced by Denise Tazzioli, Wendy Arden, Deborah Delorenzo and Laura Winslow, the mood was spritely and energetic. It was performed to excerpts from William Walton's "Facade," which is a series of Revolutionary War-era ditties. Although the technical executions of quick foot movements and extensions were excellent, the content of the dance was a - trifle disappointing. The movements were simple and exacting. Although this was well-done, I was left waiting for at least a couple of exciting or daring jumps and leaps. Perhaps the dance space was too small to allow for any spectacular movement. Whatever the reason, its absence was felt. SIMILARLY, GUEST choreographer Lynn Slaughter Rosenfeld's piece, Idle Conversation, was lively and playful. Dancers Kathleen Smith and Tazzioli, created a solid rapport with one another, alternating sustained exten- sions with staccato stabs; yet their solid eye contact established the foun- dation of the rapport. The music was a modern, disjointed work which did not play consistently throughout and con- tributed to the startling quality of the piece. Kathleen Smith, assistant director of the company, has also earned an MFA for U of M and shares Watson's background of Cunningham, as well as Jose Limon and Nikolais. Her piece, Short Threads, continued the concept of dance as a mood rather than a story. Danced to a series of traditional music of various ethnicities, her three dancers embodied each mood, convincingly por- traying everything from the essence of Scotland to that of Latin castinettes. Smiths' style incorporated body con- tact, rolls and progrressions which orward created a rather personal relationship between the dancers. Here, too, it would have been nice to see a flying leap or two; but they never appeared. IN BARBARA Djules Boothe's Prayer, two male and two female dan- cers described incredibly supportive and deeply caring relationships bet- ween man and man, woman and woman. and woman and man. This choreography was noticeably more lyrical than the other pieces, marked by stunning double pirouettes and body holds. Throughout the dances were piano works by Debussy and Al Jarreau, per- formed by Rose Siri and Becca Segal. In the small studio, the grand piano sounded impressively beautiful, and it provided an added dimension and balance to the modern dances. Dance Theatre 2 is doing exciting things in creating a living and growing dance life in Ann Arbor. Very impor- tantly, the performing members of DT2 are professional, well-trained and high quality dancers. They interject energy and an exciting enthusiasm into every movement. Each revealed potential to burst out of the small dance space in dazzling jumps and leaps, but the choreography redirected this energy. The intimacy of this concert afforded a keen look at good dance, but it also limited the space which is so crucial to dance. Perhaps, if given a full stage, or at least a larger studio, Watson, Smith and company, whose next concerts are in December, will reach even greater heights as well as a greater audience. i Andy 'speculiar path / By JENNIFER GAMSON me." His comparisons of the incon- Andy Breckman's melodies them- sequential and the Very Serious are so selves aren't of the rousing clap-wildly- unpredictable that listeners plummet and-sing-along style. In fact, he openly from a giddy height to a puzzled low in- admits to knowing no more than the few stantaneously. basic chords and up-down strum that every amateur guitarist dabbles with. However, Andy's crusty, zany, but loveable spontenaeity so charmed this weekend's Ark Coffeehouse audiences, that it knocked them right off their Andy Breckman is an unmistakably Jewish boy from Haddonfield, New Jersey. His mainer is open and per- sonable, alternating from self- depreciation to stinging criticism. Af- ter a brief stint as a student ("college is o stardom great. Three weeks in a life time is just right") seven years ago, he began as a standup writer and cartoonist, taking up guitar on the side. Although he barely knows enough music to get along, he is aspiring to make a million dollars-hopefully in rock and roll-so he can get performing "out of his system", take his woman away and write comedy in comfortable solitude "happily ever after." Now he plays- bars in Greenwich Village, still writing TV scripts here and there for a living. In 1979, he won an Emmy for "Hot Hero Sandwich," a children's variety series on which he worked as a writer, singer and actor. $reckman's Ann Arbor audiences will be disappointed to learn that hi musical plans for breaking into bi money do not include such favorites a "Where is Rabbi Finkelman?" and " Didn't Throw Up," in their simple,, outrageous one-man forms. When h' "makes it big," Andy Breckman will no longer be the same off-the-wall chara--'c ter with the unbelievable "chutzpah,, but another New Jersey idol who can, fill up Crisler Arena. n'- f. ^ Songwriter-humourist Andy Breckman (left), shown here with his backup band of avant-garde art rockers, appeared solo last Friday and Saturday at the Ark Coffeehouse. In the tradition of Loudon Wainwright III, Breckman pens tunes about the absurdities of everyday life. cushions and had them rolling on the floor with appreciation. Each one of Breckman's songs proves that one needn't ever be em- barrassed to display an obscure sense of humor. He defies customary rules of what "most people" will do or say in public; he's a true comedian in the "anything-for-a-laugh" sense of the word. In Andy Breckman's songs, God sits in his underwear and a young girl strolling to church on her wedding day is killed by a sheepdog falling from the sky. "I Have Lived Before" is a ditty about a woman reincarnated a thousand times-each time as a prostitute. NOTHING IS sacred to Andy Breck- man. But within the ridiculousness of his. humor there is an element of sophistication. "Railroad Bill" is a con- frontation between Breckmen, the author, and Bill, the character in his song, who challenges that "No stupid folk singer's gonna make a fool outta Join the race! prevent Birth Defects March of Dimes THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PU8LISHF me Dance Theatre 2's concerts this past Friday and Saturday night featured 'Facade,' a dance work by company director Christopher Watson. Performers seen here are, from left to right, Denise Tazzioli, Laura Winslow, and Deborah Delorenzo. * Music School to bring Sippie Wallace Spotlighting black jazz-its history, its performance, and its enduring ar- tists, a Thursday evening (Oct. 23) program on the U-M campus will be presented by local experts who are nationally known to jazz buffs and music historians. Sippie Wallace, recording star and *once a vaudeville favorite, and School of Music Professors James Standifer and James Dapogny will be featured in the 8 p.m. event in the Rackham Building. Admission is free, as the result of a gift to the sponsor, the U- MInstitute of Gerontology, from the Colonial Penn Insurance Group. Com- plimentary tickets may be obtained at the Institute offices at 520 E. Liberty (across fromthe Michigan Theater) or at the door on the night of the concert. Ipi A LECTURE preceding the Sippie Wallace concert, Standifer will describe the late-life creative spirit of jazz artists he has interviewed in researching jazz history. His lecture, .one of a series presented this month on creativity and aging, will be on the theme "The Jazz Artist's Perspective on Creativity and Aging." Ms. Wallace will then entertain with the blues music for' which she has been famous since the Her public career included extensive tours nearly 60 years ago as an ac- claimed blues singer, followed by three decades in which she sang gospel music almost exclusively. In the 1960's, at the urging of Ron Harwood, a blues scholar and now her personal manager, she returned to the- blues and has again received ovations in this country and in Europe. With Dapogny she has ap- peared in the past three months in New York City, Tanglewood, Columbia, Maryland, Sacramento, Berkeley, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Santa Barbara, as well as the Montreaux- Detroit International Jazz Festival. A WARRIOR WITHOUT A WART GREAT! RAREI Wed $1.50 til 5:30 (or cop.) 4-, COMING THIS THURSDAY to the MICHIGAN THEATRE ... will you ever shower again? ( I CC frl Classic Film Theatre N THE RUDOLF STEINER INSTITUTE OF THE GREAT LAKES AREA OCTOBER 24-25, 1980 ART WEEKEND Rudolf Steiner's Impulses in the Arts of Movement and Form A tUPROGRAM At the RUDOLF STEINER HOUSE, 1923 GEDDES, Ann Arbor - * n e n n i i n n 4 ._ n 1 + ' - .. - e . a 4 . . . n a t " ^ A ^ - 1 AA.. . ..,. I...r.:7fA1l1