Friday, November 3, 2017 @ 7:30pm – 9:30pm (PDT)
McCaw Hall, Seattle, WA, United States
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$37-$187

Tharp – Afternoon Ball (music: Martynov)
Lang – Her Door in the Sky (music: Britten)
Pite - Plot Point (music: Herrmann)

Autumn Ball
Vladimir Martynov’s Autumn Ball of the Elves, for string orchestra, represents a Russian mix of minimalism and post-romanticism that can also be heard in the music of Estonian composer Arvo Pärt. (Both composers abandoned academic compositional styles following religious conversions and developed individual voices influenced by personal interests and convictions.) In Autumn Ball of the Elves, Martynov applies a theme and variations structure to a minimalist palette. (Program note by Doug Fullington.)

Her Door to the Sky
Jessica Lang’s Her Door to the Sky was commissioned by Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival and Pacific Northwest Ballet. Her Door to the Sky premiered at Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, August 24, 2016. Major support is provided by Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation, with additional support from Aya Stark Hamilton, Deidra Wager, and Leslie & Tachi Yamada.

2017 marks the centennial celebration of legendary American painter Georgia O’Keeffe’s first solo exhibition in New York. Her Door to the Sky is inspired by O’Keeffe’s Patio Door series that she painted between 1946 and 1956. (Program note by Jessica Lang.)

Plot Point
"Plot Point
was instigated by the opportunity to work with a live orchestra. Faced with the task of choosing music, I gravitated to film scores: music that is built to support action. A film score makes space for dialogue and provides the moving image with emotional tone and tension, making it also excellent music for dance. I am a fan of Bernard Herrmann, so choosing the composer was relatively easy. I eventually settled on his hauntingly beautiful score for Hitchcock’s Psycho.

With cinematic music as my starting-off point, my thoughts turned to the structures of screenplay, and the techniques of story. For Plot Point, I wasn’t compelled to deliver a specific narrative. I was more intrigued by the subject of screenwriting itself, and by our insatiable need for story.

I started by doing what I’m told a screenwriter should never do: I worked on a storyboard before I had a story. I sketched some random narrative fragments, first on paper, then inside a maquette. I configured tiny anonymous model people in recognizable environments that evoked familiar relationships and storylines.

Each tableau inside the maquette was a strange and evocative telling. The model itself had more power than I expected: it framed a familiar piece of story that represented the whole—the meta-story. I decided to scale up the model for the stage, as-is, keeping the elements (a forest, two street lamps, a door and windows) as two-dimensional and simple as possible. Similarly, each performer in the piece is represented by another dancer who performs a distilled and stylized rendering of his or her counterpart. These models, along with the décor, are presented as a sketch of what the fleshed-out story will become: a kind of onstage storyboard. A storyboard condenses a screenplay into a series of framed actions. I’m trying to translate that idea into live action—to present the nuts and bolts of narrative—the plot points—with stop-motion choreography.

Because I am a choreographer, I always look to the human body for information about what I’m doing.  I have to ask the question: “Why do this as a dance?” or “What can a dancer do to deliver this idea that no one else can?” In Plot Point, I think it’s the purity and exactitude in the model, and the unity between the character and her model that need the mastery of dancers. If the configurations and gestures of the models sketch out the essential plot points of a narrative, their corresponding characters embody the emotional tone and tension of those moments. The characters literally flesh it out. In order to explore and demonstrate the connection between model, character, story, and body, I need to deliver this idea through heightened physical extremes and subtleties: the abandon and articulations of a dancer.

One of my challenges in working with narrative elements, but not delivering a story with a beginning-middle-end, is finding a way to get the audience to invest in what they are seeing—to actually care if the limping man gets away, or to worry that Mrs. Jones might stab herself with that kitchen knife. Part of me wants to use tropes to evoke powerful storylines (love, betrayal, revenge, pursuit, rescue, etc.) that the viewer already knows so that we can just skip to the part where they start caring and not have to bother with all that character development and exposition. But I don’t think it actually works that way. If I want to earn a response from people, I know I’m going to have to dig in and do the work.

This is where I think the expression of the body comes in. In dance we have direct access to raw emotion and tension through a wordless language that is deeply, perhaps even unconsciously, understood by the viewer. If “screenplay” means using the moving image to deliver a story in the most efficient and compelling way possible, maybe “screenplay” is a dance-able concept.

Psycho is a movie about a murder of a defenseless woman. It, in turn has inspired hundreds of films in the slasher genre. I am wondering: what is the point of Psycho? It is a beautifully made film, hailed as a masterpiece that changed audience expectations forever. It has become its own trope. Ultimately, a story presents reality at a level of remove, providing us enough detachment to allow for reflection… It would be nice to think that watching a murder on stage or in a film inspires us to lead a more reflective and sensitive life, but I’m not so sure. In the case of Psycho, is the violence portrayed anything more than thrilling entertainment? Does it make us better humans? Does it hold up a mirror to our own personal darkness—does it makes us wonder at our own capacity for evil or our ability to survive it?  Psycho is hailed as a major breakthrough in cinema but I hate the slasher genre it inspired. These images live in our systems. The shower scene from Psycho—even though I have never been able to watch it—lives in my mind beside all the other images my brain has consumed during my lifetime. That unwatched scene is in my system. Like countless other people over two or three generations, I think of it sometimes when I’m in the shower. That is the power of storytelling, for better or for worse." –Crystal Pite

The 2017 Pacific Northwest Ballet premiere of Crystal Pite’s Plot Point is generously underwritten by Jeffrey & Susan Brotman.

McCaw Hall

301 Mercer St
Seattle, WA 98109
United States

(206) 389-7676