Friday, May 18th, 2012

A duet which had both dangling about at the top of ropes to the song Tea for Two was particularly obscure

July 22, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Entertainment

A duet which had both dangling about at the top of ropes to the song “Tea for Two” was particularly obscure. And if the Gandinis have such a thing as a best friend, they will already have been told sotto voce that spouting R D Laing on stage – albeit tongue-in-cheek riddles about ignorance and stupidity – is a no-no. A soloist performs a delicate, brooding routine with quoits, blending toss-and-catch with an absorbing dance-exploration of empty circles, looped onto arms and legs and linked and unlinked like a Chinese puzzle.At best, the show achieves a visual poetry that is quietly breathtaking But the spell is broken with every dropped catch. These are not many, but the merest slip produces a sickening clunk that can shatter the glassy continuum for minutes at a time.

Given that the Gandinis set themselves such formidable tasks, it is hard to know how this can be overcome.Recent additions to the Project are a handstand virtuoso and an aerialist, and while their contortions are physically very impressive, they seem somewhat at odds with the original idea linking dance and dexterity. Clarke is the Gandini’s greatest asset, producing moves so fluid, clear and compelling that dancing comes to seem quite the most natural way to travel while manipulating various missiles. The work begins and ends with pure dance, Tai Chi-like, slow-motion sequences that act as an Oriental obeisance – the before-and-after bow – to an hour’s activity that stretches the performers’ concentration (and the audience’s sense of wonder) to the limits.Once the aerial ballet begins, what looks simplest is often most effective – though it might be the most devilish to pull off. Five jugglers walk through a brisk formation dance, spurting a steady stream of translucent clubs high above them like a Roman fountain. A straightforward one-man juggle becomes a brain-teasing marvel when an extra pair of hands joins in from behind to suggest a multi-limbed Indian god.

What they saw in the best of juggling – the elegant arc of a trajectory, the rhythmic flow of catch and throw – is a direct kinetic relationship with contemporary dance. If they could bring these disciplines up close to each other, perhaps something interesting might rub off It did.
“… and other curiOus Questions” (the hanging title and dodgy typewriter are Gandini hallmarks) is their third collaboration with Gill Clarke, one of the most sought-after dancers on the contemporary circuit and leading light of Siobhan Davies’s company. But company founders Sean Gandini and Kati Yo-Hokkala (a juggler and a Finnish dancer-cum-gymnast respectively) seem to have had something more than an arty alternative-circus act in mind. When dancing, most practitioners would agree, it helps to keep your hands free. And what kind of juggler wants to worry about hip-twists and foot-flips when keeping five balls in the air is hard enough already? If the Gandini Juggling Project had never happened, frankly no one would suppose they had missed anything.

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