Tickets now on sale for All Good Men in Fringe Festival

pearl-primus-image-w-quote

Thank you to everyone who came out for the open rehearsal of All Good Men yesterday at Artomatic. My mother emailed me the quote in the picture above – by Pearl Primus – and I thought I’d put it up here.

All Good Men is not about prejudice, but more about ‘the hate that hate made‘. As independent as we may be in this free nation, we all influence each other. More than any moralizing about prejudice, that is what All Good Men deals with. Tickets just went on sale, CLICK HERE to buy your tickets for the July 16th or 18th performances.

To see some clips from the open rehearsal, click here to find Bettmann Dances on Facebook.

Thank you to to Ashtan, Allen, Jessica, and the dancers for sharing themselves at the open rehearsal. I’m confident that we’re on our way to something worthy of our collective voices.

I’ve decided that rather than trying to have the dancers voice the theater sections, we’re going to pre-record those. Creating a music/theater score for the performers is really going to free us up to be inventive and bold in our performance. Recording session this sunday. Buy your tickets today!

Two Takes on a Critic

rooseveltI did a show this past Thursday and got a positive review… which was pretty exciting. Here is the part of George Jackson’s review that talks about the duet that I and Kate Jordan did:

“Best on the program was a truly impromptu number that came into being because a dancer, Sylvana Christopher Sandoz, needed for the evening’s final item, had sent word that she was running late. Rather than announce a long intermission, one of The Dinner Party’s hosts – Amanda Abrams – accepted an offer by Kate Jordan, choreographer of the final item, and Robert Bettmann, a former participant, to improvise a duet. Available was a bouncy piece of country western music. Jordan and Bettmann courted to it with a jaunt as fresh as new mown clover. She, streamlined, had force, speed and unabashed glee. He, lanky, pretended to be laid back but was all angles – sensually so. I’ve seen him dance before but not so seamlessly and cleanly. Together, this pair nonchalantly fused hip hop and bits of ballet to a square dance stride and conjured up the likes of Lil’ Abner and Daisy Mae’s grandkids. It is a generation that has been to the Big City, at least via the television tube.”

Reviews are part of the life-blood of an artist. You need them to get new audience. But at the same time, as an artist, you have to ignore how your work might be perceived, or you can’t do the work.

I’m working at Tryst this morning and met a good guy, who is a member of the armed service. He shared with me this quote from Roosevelt, and I told him about the following from E. B. White.

Theodore Roosevelt

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again; because there is not effort without error and shortcomings; but who does actually strive to do the deed; who knows the great enthusiasm, the great devotion, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement and who at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly. So that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat.”

E. B. White

The critic leaves at curtain fall
To find, in starting to review it,
He scarcely saw the play at all
For watching his reaction to it.

And to my new friend, and all of the other servicemen and women out there: stay safe.
_____________

Later same day: I’m not a critic hater, and I think this post makes me seem like one. I mean, “everyone hates a critic”, but not really. To wit:

1) There are lots of very good critics, and they serve a vital role.

2) Being a critic is being an artist/risk-taker (like all writing.)

3) With some frequency critics’ writing shows more craft and consideration than the performances they are forced to visit with, and,

4) I think criticism regularly creates more thought than the performances that stimulated the reviews.

A little more about Contact Improvisation

There’s a myth in the Contact Improv community that you should dance the same way with everybody. That if you’re a good loving contacter, you dance the same way with everybody, and you love dancing with everybody the same. I’ve been doing Contact Improvisation for 15 years, and have studied with some wonderful teachers – including Nancy Stark Smith, Anne Cooper Albright, Andrew Harwood… – and it’s absolutely clear to me that we all dance differently with one another.

The Contact community is open, and caring. Closing doors to connection is not encouraged. But I have seen the most generous dancers exert clear control over the depth of connection in a dance. They don’t close the door, but they know not to fling it wide open with every dance either. That’s something that many amateurs can not perceive at first.

We are all capable of being truly sensitive to ourselves and others at the same time. But you can’t control other people. If you find yourself dancing with someone who is not really being sensitive to you – what can you do? What should you do?

If I feel like I’m having a dance with someone who is not present with me, I get more distant. And I have developed a variety of physical skills to create slight distances. (I’ll be teaching some exercises to develop those skills this weekend.) If I try to take some distance and they don’t let me – they are unresponsive to me – I know to push a little further away, and create as much distance as I need until I find myself in a dance I am comfortable with.

The class I’m teaching this Saturday at Artomatic will introduce some exercises focusing on control of our boundaries, and the edges of contact. I hope you’ll join me. Saturday, 2-3:30pm on the 6th floor dance stage at Artomatic. I’ve designed this class to be friendly for beginners, but hopefully of interest to those with experience, too.

Contact dance is intimate. It is built around following a point of contact on someone else’s body, with a point on your body. But the release and flow of improvisation do not negate the need to be able to make choices. This class will allow us to practice some options for dance connections.

The video here is a nice example of Contact dance. I see in it how partners follow the point of contact as a guide to following each other’s energy.