The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, February 2, 1995 - 5 'FutureDance 1935-2035'also leaps through past present 'U' Dance Department uses a multi-technical approach to exploring 100 years of movement By Liz Shaw Daily Weekend Editor What would the world be today without any computers? How long could you go without e-mail or Doom2? Although the name FutureDance might lead one to think that this year's annual U dance con- cert will be concentrating on the fu- ture, that's not entirely so. The con- cert starts out with some not so humble roots in 1935, with the rise of a then up-and-coming dancer/choreogra- oher, Martha Graham. No, she didn't have a computer. 1935-2035 Perhaps if Martha Graham had a computer in 1935 when she was first creating and performing her famous "Panorama" it wouldn't have been lost for so many years. Considering the fact that the original choreogra- phy was not notated in any way, and the only real record of "Panorama" was a poorly shot film which only concentrated on a few of the dancers in the thirty-odd dancer piece. The piece in its original form was thought to be lost forever. Enter Yuriko Kikuchi, one time dancer with Martha Graham, and, in 1987, associate artistic director of the Graham Company. Using her knowledge of Graham's technique, the memories of the women who performed in the original piece, and the one and only film, Kikuchi re-. constructed "Panorama." Although the original piece was over 45 min- utes and the re-done piece reduced it to a mere nine to 10, it was an amazing feat considering what few sources Kikuchi had to work with. Since Kikuchi's reconstruction, the dance has been performed very few times. One of these times was last fall during the University's celebra- tion of Martha Graham's 100th birth- day. Thursday's concert will be launched by "Panorama" as a means of introducing the theme of 100 years of dance and the study of movement. Graham's piece is a strong piece of history to use as this springboard. "What you see are archeological remnants of this work. It exists as a piece of art itself," said Peter Sparling, U Dance Department Chair, and a former principal dancer of the Martha Graham Company. "Kikuchi was able to distill the body of the work." Moving ahead on our dance time line lands you at "Wintercount," a post-modern piece about the'30's by visiting choreographer Janet Lilly. Lilly, a former dancer with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, presents a displace view of the '30's by almost taking the time periodout of context. "It's almost as if she has had the privilege of peeking into the past," Sparling said of Lilly, "glimpsing through the lense of the present." The computer age is the backdrop for "Stale Green Traffic Light," cho- reographed by former Merce Cunningham dancer Alan Good. Known for his fifteen years with avant garde choreographer Cunningham, Good tries to separate his style of composition from Cunningham'sjust as Cunningham separated his dance moves from the music used in his pieces. Just as audiences had to learn to watch Merce Cunningham's works, Good had to learn to work in the unorthodox stylings of a man who went against convention. While Good's love of all things related to computers is a part of his inspiration for his "Traffic Light," the basic premise is computer programs. "Computers are now ubiquitous; they are tools that everyone uses. They seep in and become normal," Alan Good said in a recent interview. "I offer this as an open question to see what happens to us when these new softwares appear in our world and as we become fluent with them, how do we look at our lives and our world with these computers in them?" Continuing in the vein of life oc- curring in multiple layers, with many things happening simultaneously, Good's piece isn't solely about the computer program, but what is going on at the same time as this program is running. "Life is a wonderful, illogical, ever-present thing," Good empha- sized, "life isn't just in the software- there's a great big 'meanwhile' going on in life at all times." Good's piece is a highly complex fruit of many people's labors. Not the least of which is Susan McDaniel (of CREW), who was in charge of all of the computer programming that goes along with the piece. Hank Manning, of the Graduate English Program, also had a great deal of his time and work go into the conception of "Traffic Light." The biggest influence on the feel of the piece, however, will prob- ably come from the music, which comes straight from a CD-ROM video game, the same game that Good spent h o u r playing after the pass- ing of hismotherlastMarch. "There's some- t h i n g very quietabout the music; the sounds offer si- lence," Good said. "If you put a little silence around things it adds weight, dignity, gives things a sense of being in their proper ritu- alistic time." We travel further into the computer age with Jessica Fogel's "Save Changes Before Quitting," a dance in which the movements are based on actual parts and functions of the computer. She works to make the body a type of "portable software." As Fogel states: "Many of the words used to describe cyberspace activities or computer functions are pregnant with verbal or visual puns and images." Fogel takes this familiar computer language and manipulates it into a whole new mean- ing. The piece includes an electronic score by U composer Stephen Rush. The concert comes to an end with the premiere of Peter Sparling's "Pur- suit of Happiness," a wildly varied piece which Sparling describes as his "own kind of Mission:Impossible." The work includes both dancers and a narrator/actor, portrayed by local art- ist Malcolm Tulip. The setting of the piece is a dance class in the year 2035. "I asked myself, 'What would I tell dancers trying to dance in zero gravity,' if I were still around and teaching dance in 2035," Sparling said. The piece is also the stopper for the show, the end of the timeline, the end of the study in movement is its different aspects and perceptions. It's all about "putting art in unconven- tional spaces" and exploring the un- expected. "If you open your eyes wide enough," Sparling said, "you can see art and technology happening all around you, and it's up to the artist to incorporate this expanding media into their works." FutureDance 1935-2035 is being performed at the Power Center February 2, 3, and 4 at 8 p.m., and February 5 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $12-$16 for reserved seating and student seating is available for $6. Call 764-0450 for more info. Oscar nominations: men good but no women In less than two weeks the Acad- emy of Motion Picture Arts and Sci- ences will unveil the nominations for one of the most wide open Oscar races in recent memory. Whereas last year at this time the names Hanks, Hunter, Spielberg, Tommy Lee Jones, and the film "Schindler's List" could have already been engraved on five of lesser-known works to recieve nomi- nations has drastically increased. Un- fortunately, even these advantages will not likely translate into a Best Picture nomination for either the "Hoop Dreams" or "Ed Wood." Instead the studios will likely award themselves. "Four Weddings and a Funeral" and "The Shawshank Redemption" would seem the likeli- est candidates. "Little Women" or "Nobody's Fool" may also contend. The Best Actor race also features three likely candidates. Last year's winner, Tom Hanks, in the one cat- egory in which "Gump" is more quali- fied than its chief rival "Pulp Fic- tion," is a sure nominee. Everyone loves a comeback so John Travolta will certainly be nominated. The ex- tremely worthy Paul Newman will also be a definite nomination. Hugh Grant ("Four Weddings") and Ralph Fiennes ("Quiz Show") will likely round out the ballot with only serious competition from the two "Shawshank" leads, Morgan Freeman and Tim Robbins. Best Actress is an abysmal mess. Hollywood may have to look over- seas to find suitable nominees. If they choose to stay at home the melodramatic claptrap that spouted from Jodie Foster ("Nell") and Meg Ryan ("When a Man Loves a Woman") will be rewarded. Jessica Lange ("Blue Sky") will be nomi- nated for a role filmed almost four years ago. The other two will likely be Winona Ryder ("Little Women") and Sigourney Weaver ("Death and the Maiden"). Yet because dying never hurts one's chance to garnish a nomination, don't count out Jessica Tandy ("Camilla"). Martin Landau ("Ed Wood") should and will win Best Supporting Actor for his alternately humorous and frightening, yet always poignant portrayal of Bela Lugosi. His only rivals will be Samuel L. Jackson ("Pulp Fiction") and Gary Sinise ("Forrest Gump"). A big push for Jackson's co-star, Bruce Willis will likely win him a nomination. The final nominee will be either Paul Scofield ("Quiz Show") or the more deserved Chazz Palmenteri ("Bullets over Broadway"). Best Supporting Actress, an award which in recent years has gone to such thespians as Whoopi Goldberg and Marisa Tomei is again a weak field. Dianne Wiest ("Bullets") and Kirsten Dunst ("Interview with the Vampire") will be nominated deservedly. Uma Thurman ("Fiction") and Robin Wright ("Gump") will ride the coat- tails of their respective films. Either Susan Sarandon ("Little Women") or, in a gushy, career-rewarding move, Sophia Loren ("Ready to Wear") will close the nominees. Finally, the group most adventur- ous with their nominations, the direc- tors may do the right thing and nomi- nate Tim Burton ("Ed Wood") and/or Krystof Kieslowski ("Red") along- side such locks as Quentin Tarantino ("Fiction"), Robert Zemeckis ("Gump") and Robert Redford ("Quiz Show"). Frequent nominees, Woody Allen and Oliver Stone also may get tabbed. If they choose to play it safe, however, either Mike Newell ("Four Weddings") and/or Frank Darabont ("Shawshank") will be rewarded. the six major statuettes, this year very little is certain. Three films are mortal locks to receive Best Picture nominations - the front-running "Forrest Gump," "Pulp Fiction," and "Quiz Show." No other film will contend for the actual award and no other work is * guaranteed a nomination. Because eligible films are not only accessible in the theater but also on videocassettes sent to the Academy voters the possibilities for FREE YOUR FEET. 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