Music for Lazarus commissioned by the Charles and Joan Gross Family Foundation.Īdditional support for the creation of Lazarus is provided by Simin N. Lazarus was supported by commissioning funds from Cal Performances at the University of California, Berkeley.Īdditional commissioning support for Lazarus provided by The John F. Mellon Foundation.Ĭommissioning support for Lazarus provided by The Auditorium Theatre (Chicago). Lazarus was made possible by the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. The world premiere of Lazarus is made possible with major support from American Express. 'He’s still affecting the world on a massive scale.'” 'He’s still affecting folk: black, brown, white, indifferent, whatever,' Mr. Harris, that circles back to Ailey: With each dancing generation, with every performance of his 1960 masterpiece Revelations, Ailey is reborn. Lazarus is about resurrection and, for Mr. Now that he has some distance, he said he sees Lazarus as the final piece of a trilogy that began with Home (2011), a work for Ailey exploring club culture in the time of AIDS, and continued with Exodus (2015), which alluded to police brutality and activism. Harris never met but who, he said, felt like a guide during the process. "…a poetic homage to Alvin Ailey, a man Mr. The New York Timesfeature story, 11/27/18: "A Dance Homage to Alvin Ailey as His Company Turns 60" Lazarus brings Ailey back to life by showing why he still matters to a living artist of Mr. The cool confidence of the style has a spiritual force that’s uplifting, and the pleasure of it is mixed with a revelation of the past in the present, of black history in the body language. The choreography is based on the Philadelphia style called GQ: rhythmically intricate footwork with a laconic upper body off-kilter steps as if on a rolling surface jumps that twist loosely in the air. Harris asks many deep questions, implicitly and explicitly, through voice-over text and song lyrics: questions about the 'blood memory' that Ailey cited as the source of his choreography questions about how to be a black man in a white world questions that feel painfully urgent and personal. Images of terrible beauty coalesce and disperse. At wide intervals, there’s also music for dancing, with an irresistible beat. When that music is going, Mr. The New York Times review, 12/2/18: "Rennie Harris’s Lazarus Asks Big Questions at Ailey" Speaking in code, they divulge why, once risen, every Lazarus must keep moving - or grooving." Yet look closely and you will see in the infectious moves traces of the agonising early steps. The audience goes crazy - finally something to whoop and whistle over. For Ailey’s extraordinary troupers, he has fashioned a maze of vintage steps more exhilaratingly complex than anything you’ll find on YouTube or on the streets. "Stunning. Bold. Gorgeously unhurried, the 15-person piece proceeds according to the intuitive logic of a nightmare - in isolated shards untethered to dramatic imperative. From his vast knowledge of hip-hop and its precursors, the Philadelphia native has chosen for Lazarus’s foundation a restless, speedy rhythm-house: wending, grapevine steps, rolling cha-cha hips, jitterbugging feet, and lower legs flung forward as in Irish step-dancing. The one not to miss is Rennie Harris' two-act Lazarus, a dense, difficult nightmare of African-American history in which despair is set against the delight of rhythmically intricate dance and cool Philadelphia style."įinancial Times review, 12/3/18: "The nightmarish and the exhilarating meet in Rennie Harris’s ‘Lazarus’" (subscription required) "The premieres in Ailey's 60th anniversary season have risen to the occasion. The New Yorker's "Goings On About Town" column, 12/24/18: "Has Lazarus become more potent and raw? Is it more relevant given the dramatic events that have occurred-the murder of George Floyd and the wave of uprisings in 2020 that demanded an end to police violence against people of color-since its premiere in 2018? Yes and yes and more yes." The New York Times review, 12/5/21: "Exploring the Dimensions of Black Power at Alvin Ailey" Watch an ABC Nightline feature on Lazarus and Alvin Ailey's 60th anniversary Performances, November 29 - December 31.
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