La Rotonde
En
En
Batsheva Dance Company Premieres Ohad Naharin’s “Hora”

Batsheva Dance Company Premieres Ohad Naharin’s “Hora”

31 mai 2009

Article de Deborah Friedes Galili paru dans danceinisrael.com le 31 mai 2009
Hora - Batsheva Dance Company - photo Gadi DagonThere’s a certain baseline of excitement when it comes to watching a preview of a world premiere, especially when it’s by a world renowned choreographer like Ohad Naharin.  As you might imagine, that baseline is pretty high.

So I was excited (dare I say thrilled?) to attend the press showing of Ohad Naharin’s Hora shortly before its debut in Jerusalem on May 18th.  And, I’m happy to report, my excitement only grew as I saw snippets of the latest work by Batsheva Dance Company’s artistic director.   Besides being new, Hora feels remarkably fresh (and here I’ll note that my newspaper write-up of the preview was titled “Fresh and Exciting” – two truly fitting adjectives for the dance).

As a dance historian, I was delighted to find more treasures in this showing of Hora besides the basic pleasure of previewing a new, promising work.  Certain elements of Naharin’s dance conjure up prominent images from other choreographers’ masterworks.  The dancers repeatedly step into fifth position with one arm outstretched on a high diagonal and fingers pointing down to the floor – a slight variation on a familiar stance from George Balanchine’s celebrated Serenade. And during one section, as the sounds of Claude Debussy’s Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune filled the theater – transformed by Isao Tomita’s synthesizer – I couldn’t help comparing the bent wrists of the Batsheva dancers to the angled wrists of the dancers in Vaslav Nijinsky’s Faune.

Lire la suite sur danceinisrael.com
Voir la page de Hora