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Capturing
the Wind
by Virginia Myers Kelly, American Magazine,
Spring 2002
Vladimir Angelov '96, has
been blowing through the contemporary ballet world since he was
16, when he challenged his classical ballet teacher in the National
Ballet School of his native Bulgaria. "I was changing the
steps," he recalls. "I'd say, 'Don't you think this
is more musical?'" When the instructor told him to make his
own dance, Angelov dismissed the disciplinary tone and took him
literally.
His newest work, Chinook, blew through the
Washington dance community when it was premiered in January by
City Dance Ensemble at Washington's Dance Place. The Washington
Post wrote: "choreographer Vladimir Angelov provided all
the elements for the dancer to become an element herself-the wind.
The work is an intense whisper."
After dancing for years with Bulgaria's Ballet
Arabesque, the classically trained Angelov defected to the United
States in 1988 with his mother and brother. He came to AU in the
1990s and studied with Naima Prevots, whom he praises for allowing
him to follow his passion and focus his study on choreography.
"I became a professional choreographer at AU." He chose
AU over a full scholarship at New York University (NYU), because
NYU offered Angelov little flexibility in its requirements, while
"AU offered me what is close to my heart."
Today, Angelov's work has been performed
all over the world-Paris, Vienna, Kyoto, Latvia, Puerto Rico,
Athens, New York, where reviewers describe Angelov's choreography
as "dazzling," "breathtaking," and "infused
with a spirit of discovery." His latest work includes dances
for the Kirov Ballet in St. Petersburg and the Kirov Academy of
Ballet in Washington; the Vail International Dance Festival in
Colorado; the Kennedy Center Theatre production of Soul Possessed;
and the San Francisco Ballet and the Alberta Ballet in Canada.
Born and raised in Bulgaria, schooled in
Austria and Germany, married to a Japanese woman, and living in
the capital of the United States, this self-described "international
man," uses his internationalism in his work. For Chinook,
he chose the mystic-sounding fujara-a Slovakian woodwind-as accompaniment;
for another work, he incorporated kabuki, the Japanese theatrical
dance form. Including international elements "is like putting
more and more windows in your house, to let more light in,"
he says.
The search for "windows" has stretched
Angelov far beyond classical ballet. Ballet dancers "have
more capacity with their bodies," he says, while "Modern
dance people use the body in a more natural way." He fuses
the two forms to move his work into new territory, to "make
a flow of two languages without breaking the logic of what you're
trying to say."
And just what is he trying to say?
Different dances have different messages -there is Ginare, literally
"the anger of the earth," inspired by earthquake; he
created Suite Dreams, a story ballet, for Alberta; there is Lost
Horizon for the Kirov; and Prism, an exploration of light, for
City Dance Ensemble. Each piece focuses on a theme that can be
articulated in one sentence, and each attends to detail. "For
me everything in human movement is dance, and everything means
something. Even in stillness there is dance."
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Fresh
Feats with New Beats
by Virginia Myers Kelly, American Magazine,
Spring 2002
Lights come up, a trumpet sings a lyric melody,
and the audience settles in for an evening of the graceful limbs
and lines of modern dance-then suddenly they are startled by a
percussive tap, inserted like punctuation into the flow of the
movement.
Choreographer Barry Blumenfeld '93,
'97, creator of Tap Fusion, has taken modern dance and
infused its energy with "hoofing," by incorporating
elements of tap dance. It's a technique Blumenfeld developed at
AU, when he first took up dance thanks to a scrambled class schedule.
He remembers thinking, "Hey, I'm in college, I can do whatever
I want." He took a tap class from Carol Vaughn. Within a
matter of weeks, Blumenfeld, who studied psychology and theatre
as an undergraduate, had decided he was a dancer. He also earned
an MA in dance from AU and began Tap Fusion four years ago in
New York.
Tap gave birth to Blumenfeld's choreography-his
first piece was a stair dance, and his second started out like
a Fred Astaire dance, he says, and "turned hip-hoppy."
When professors urged him to break further from conventional tap
rhythm and structure, he developed a more lyrical style, and his
third piece "flowed and slid all over the stage."
"I was like, 'Aha! I need to do more,
it can't be clickety-clack with the feet for me."
Now settled in Manhattan with his wife, April Cantor '95, Blumenfeld
has a wide repertoire of modern dances enhanced by tap and set
to music he commissions. One piece is based on a letter from a
former building manager. The letter's odd punctuation inspired
Blumenfeld to set it to dance. The manager became a landlady,
portrayed by the voice of AU's Naima Prevots, whom Blumenfeld
calls "a major mentor in my life."
His newest piece is an evening-length dance
inspired by blessings at the Jewish wedding ceremony. Compelled
to create a distinctly Jewish dance, Blumenfeld noted that many
artists tackle the Holocaust, and others describe the stereotypical
"guilt, whining, and kvetching" of Jews. But, he counters,
"Judaism is a joyous thing for me. I think the joy gets overlooked.
"I wanted to share something, but I
didn't want it to be so Jewish that it would alienate 99.5 percent
of the world." To create Sheva B'rachot, or Seven Blessings,
he gathered a group of artistic friends-though all but he were
disaffiliated Jews-and, he says, like Talmudic scholars, they
explored Jewish texts on marriage. The result is a mix of music,
video, painting, and dance. It was presented as a work in progress
in February and is scheduled for a May performance at Manhattan's
respected 92d Street Y.
That fact is significant-this young talent
already has shown his work twice in the city, and each time his
performance has sold out. "Tap Fusion is a niche," he
says. "I've thrown away a lot of the boundaries . . . I'm
on the fringe of two different worlds. The modern dance world
doesn't want me on their dance floors. [In] the tap world, the
purists aren't sure what I do is tap."
It's challenge enough to create interest
in a city saturated with choreographers, but Blumenfeld has won
a highly competitive New York Foundation of the Arts fellowship
in choreography to begin Sheva, and he has been reviewed in the
New York Times and Dance magazine. He attributes much of his success
to his training at AU, where he was allowed to focus his studies
on preparing to run a dance company and teach-exactly what he
does now in New York.
"My goal is to affect how people see
and think about dance," says Blumenfeld. "Even if they
don't like my work, [I hope] people leave the show thinking, 'I've
never thought about dance quite that way'. . . That's good for
dance as an art form."
Tap Fusion on-line: www.tapfusion.com
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