[Mb-hair] Kenny Ortega's a winner
Reeeees at aol.com
Reeeees at aol.com
Tue Oct 19 08:29:13 PDT 2004
Oct 19 2004 | Los Angeles Times
http://www.calendarlive.com/stage/segal/cl-et-choreography19oct19,2,2438885.st
ory
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK
Winning moves
Artistry and back-patting highlight the American Choreography Awards.
By Lewis Segal , Times Staff Writer
If dancers are usually nothing more than sideshows or special effects in
contemporary Hollywood, the annual American Choreography Awards allows them one
long evening of delirious self-celebration and empowerment.
Divided into eight categories, the awards honor achievements in dance on
camera and often confirm the worst about the dancers' status quo. But the event
itself is more a carnival of the dispossessed than a conventional,
celebrity-laden trophy giveaway.
As the nearly four-hour 10th edition confirmed Sunday at the Orpheum Theatre,
the show releases the commercial dance world's deep sense of family loyalty.
Consequently, the people responsible for sleazy, derivative dance numbers from
the most forgettable film musicals or TV shows will frequently earn titanic
ovations, compared with the polite approval granted the greatest concert-dance
choreographers of our time (Paul Taylor, for example).
However, it's the concert-dance world that invariably contributes the most
indelible live performances. On Sunday, these highlights included the
phenomenally pliant Matthew Rushing in Alvin Ailey's "A Songfor You," the magically
buoyant Marty Lawson in David Parsons' "Caught," and the daring, hyper-gymnastic
members of Diavolo Dance Theatre in excerpts from "The Wheel."
Soulful ensemble choreography by Ka-Ron Brown Lehman, fierce and buoyant
martial-arts gymnastics by Matt Mullins and the Talauegas' spectacular display of
"krumping" (the re-Africanized, militarized successor to hip-hop) also
punctuated the proceedings.
In speaking about the late Walt Disney during one of Sunday's special
tributes, his brother Roy O. Disney called movies "a rhythmic medium" and drew
attention to the Disney animators' focus on "the analysis of motion."
This focus linked Disney's dances to Parsons (whose "Caught" exploits the
same perceptual quirk that allows us to see a series of still drawings as a
moving image), to Mullins, to the krumping segment and to all the other
choreographies (live or taped) that attempted something more purposeful in movement terms
than just a pileup offlashy diversions. And it suddenly made you view Walt D.
not only as a film innovator but also as an unlikely but genuine
postmodernist.
Along with Walt Disney and Lehman, choreographer/director Kenny Ortega
received one of the special (out-of-competition) awards — and would have deserved it
had he done nothing else in his career but the bracingly politicized theater
piece "Declare Yourself" at the very end of the program.
Co-directed by Ortega and Robert Egan, this collage of pithy spoken and
danced viewpoints on millennial America provided a reality check for the whole
event. If it jolted dancers out of their self-obsession long enough to send them
to the polls on Nov. 2, Ortega and Egan ought to get a special public service
award next year.
Honorees and Winners
Innovator: Walt Disney
Career achievement: Kenny Ortega
Educator award: Ka-Ron Brown Lehman
Feature film
Tie: Sylvain Chomet for "The Triplets of Belleville"
Dave Scott, Shane Sparks and Robert James Hoffman III for "You Got Served"
Short film
Édouard Lock for "Amelia," La La La Human Steps
Television special
Tie: Jason Samuels Smith for the 2003 Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon:
Opening Number
Paul Taylor for "Acts of Ardor," PBS "Dance in America"
Television variety series
Monie Adamson for "Mad TV," "Regional Championships"
Episodic television
Fred Tallaksen for "Malcolm in the Middle," "Jump Jump"
Music video
Hi-Hat, Anwar "Flii" Burton, Cicely Bradley and Olisa Thompson for Missy
Elliott's "Pass Dat Dutch"
Commercials
Fatima Robinson for Target, "Changing of the Guards"
Fight choreography
Tie: George Marshall Ruge for "Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the
Black Pearl"
Keith Adams, Sonny Chiba, Quentin Tarantino and Yuen Woo-Ping for "Kill Bill
Vol. 2"
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