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By Eileen Wingard
In an unexpected marriage of klezmer and ballet, the Ninth
Annual Lipinsky Jewish Arts Festival wedded the San Diego Ballet with the
Freilechs, a Tijuana-based klezmer ensemble.
Result? A startling and innovative program for the festival
and a treat for the audience.
The Freilechs, directed by Alexander Gourevitch, provided
music while dancers, under the direction of Javier Velasco, presented
extraordinary choreography.
The program, "Klezmer Ballet," repeated five times between
June 5 and 9, was presented in three parts. It opened with the Freilechs
alone. The second part featured two dancers interpreting a poem. The third
segment was the wedding of klezmer music and ballerinas in tuttus and toe
shoes.
The third part offered a surprising contrast to traditional
klezmer, which usually evokes visions of men and women dancing separately,
the women wearing dresses with long sleeves, high collars and ankle-length
hems, with kerchiefs covering their heads. ³Klezmer Ballet,²
however, featured klezmer music interpreted by dancers with white
transparent tights and spaghetti straps over their bare shoulders.
At first, the effect seemed incongruous. Yet, as the dancers
twirled, pirouetted and leaped, they convincingly conveyed the joy and
verve of the klezmer music. The audience rewarded their exuberance and
expertise with a standing ovation.
No less impressive was the second segment of the program, a
pas de deux choreographed by Velasco to the poetry of Kenneth Fearing, a
Jewish-American poet of the Depression era. The poem, "Love: 20 Cents the
First Quarter-Mile," was read by Doug Jacobs, one of San Diego's most
venerated actors and cofounder of the San Diego Repertory Theater. Bert
Turetsky, professor of string bass at UCSD and member of the Second Avenue
Klezmer Ensemble, improvised accompaniments on the string bass. Using bow
strokes, pizzicato and sticks tapping the strings, he achieved a variety
of unusual effects that complemented Fearing's words.
The choreography was innovative, sensuous and evocative,
remarkably executed by Stephanie Aubuchon and Gabriel Medina. The San
Diego Ballet Alliance recently selected this work as the most outstanding
choreography in its category.
Opening the program were the Freilechs, featuring the
impressive klezmer artistry of Alexander Gourevitch, who can make his
clarinet literally speak.. He was accompanied by an ensemble of violin,
piano and percussion. The contrasting freilechs, bulgars and niggunim were
all crowd-pleasers.
This group will be one of four participating in Klezmer
Summit, the concluding program of the Ninth Annual Lipinsky Family Jewish
Arts Festival.. The other three groups will be Yale Strom's Klazzj, the
Second Avenue Klezmer Ensemble and the Hollywood Klezmer. Performances
will take place on June 25 at the Lyceum Theater and on June 26 at the
North Coast Rep in Solana Beach. |