The stuff they strut on the jellicle catwalk
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, September 13, 2024


The stuff they strut on the jellicle catwalk
Clockwise from left: Primo, Robert Mason, Baby Byrne and Dava Huesca, performers in “Cats: The Jellicle Ball,” the wildly popular reimagining of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Cats,” at the Perelman Performing Arts Center in New York, Aug. 9, 2024. From the first solo to the euphoric final bows, dance is essential to the world-building of “Cats: The Jellicle Ball.” (OK McCausland/The New York Times)

by Siobhan Burke



NEW YORK, NY.- Before anyone steps onto the catwalk in “Cats: The Jellicle Ball,” the wildly popular reimagining of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Cats” at the Perelman Performing Arts Center, a dancer’s silhouette appears at the back of the stage, darting across a row of windows. At first, his movement recalls the limber ballet-jazz of the original 1982 Broadway production, accented with tricks like a split leap and a back walkover. He has two little ears, a tail. He could be prowling on a rooftop at night.

But then something shifts. The silhouetted dancer strips away his tail, and vintage musical theater gives way to elements of vogue: the circling wrists of hand performance; the crouched legs and flashing arms of a duckwalk; the whirl and dramatic fall of a spin and dip.

“It’s arguably one of the most important moments in the show,” said the dancer Primo, to whom the silhouette belongs. “All of that represents exactly what you’re about to see: the marriage of the old with the now.”

This wordless overture, choreographed by Ousmane Omari Wiles, introduces the seemingly incongruous and yet surprisingly seamless collision of worlds at the heart of “Cats: The Jellicle Ball.” Extended three times since its premiere in June, and now running through Sept. 8, the show reinvents the classic musical in the context of queer ballroom culture, replacing cats with people who have come together to walk a ball, battling for trophies on a nightclub runway.

From that shadowy first solo to the euphoria of the final bows, dance is essential to the storytelling and world-building of “The Jellicle Ball,” which is directed by Bill Rauch and Zhailon Levingston and choreographed by Wiles and Arturo Lyons. Not limited to the catwalk stage, the movement often spills into the audience, with performers buzzing among the front rows and cocktail tables that flank the runway. The ornate, extravagant costumes by Qween Jean create physical possibilities, too, becoming playful extensions of the choreography.

And while the show includes plenty of voguing — the dance form that evolved out of New York’s underground ball scene of the 1970s and 1980s — Wiles and Lyons drew from a range of dance genres and influences, highlighting connections to the Black and Latino, gay and transgender communities where ballroom was born and continues to thrive.

Wiles, who is from Senegal and grew up in New York, said that early in the creative process, he “came into the idea of wanting to celebrate queer club culture itself and all the dance styles we embody within that.” As the characters compete in categories like Virgin Vogue, Tag Team and so many more, the three major forms of vogue — Old Way, New Way, Vogue Femme — interweave with moments of jazz funk, hip-hop and Latin and West African dance.

While departing from the source material in some ways, “The Jellicle Ball” keeps the original score largely intact. Wiles and Lyons said the tracks that accompany voguing are typically slower than the songs in “Cats,” which presented some choreographic challenges.

“There’s a statement in ballroom that if you can vogue, you can vogue to anything,” Lyons said. “We took that and ran with it. It was a true test to see how creative we were.”

The cast members’ backgrounds also reflect the show’s union of musical theater and ballroom; most of the performers, who all sing and dance, came to the project steeped in one of those worlds. Baby Byrne, who plays the role of Victoria and serves as the dance captain, said that meshing the two required “a lot of listening from both sides.”

In shaping how the show would move, the choreographers “wanted the energy to feel in unison,” Wiles said. But they also gave the dancers space to be themselves and emphasize their strengths. Four performers with ballroom backgrounds spoke about embodying their characters through movement and how their paths led them to the Jellicle Ball.

Baby Byrne

With her voluminous blond wig and knee-high white boots, Byrne, as Victoria, introduces her character with a languid, sultry solo near the start of the show. “Victoria is a character that dances between the lines of sensuality and power,” she said, not unlike Byrne herself.

“That’s the kind of performer I am,” she said. “A mix of dramatic, soft, powerful, sensual. All of those things.”

Byrne, who grew up doing community theater in Rockaway Beach, Queens, first encountered voguing as a student at Purchase College, in a workshop taught by dancer Jason A. Rodriguez, known for his role on the FX series “Pose.” She trained in commercial dance styles in Los Angeles and New York, joining Wiles’ House of Oricci for four years; she now belongs to the House of Juicy Couture. (Houses are the chosen families of ballroom, whose members practice and compete together.)

As the dance captain, Byrne helped to contextualize ballroom during rehearsals, for members of the cast and creative team who were newer to that world. “You’re bringing an entire culture to a musical theater space, and that comes with a lot of learning,” she said.

A freestyle dancer outside the theater, Byrne relishes the parts of the show that leave room for improvisation, like Tag Team, a boisterous battle between two duos (Victoria and Tumblebrutus against Mungojerrie and Rumpleteazer). And she doesn’t mind when things go a little awry.

“As much as the show is set, I live for moments where we’re able to turn mistakes into comedy,” she said. “There’s a lot of space for that in this show, and that just makes it super ballroom.”

Robert Mason, or Silk

At 6-foot-4, Robert Mason, also known as Silk, is unmissable as Mistoffelees, the character whose magic touch brings Old Deuteronomy, a beloved elder, back to the ball. Helped, not hindered, by the additional height of 6-inch heels, Mason reliably wows the audience with ultrahigh extensions and plummeting splits, honed through years of training in ballet, jazz, majorette dancing and other styles.

Mason found ballroom shortly after moving to New York from South Carolina to attend the Juilliard School, when they were invited to a Halloween ball in the Bronx. “I see people dancing and I’m like, ‘I could do that,’” Mason said. Before long, they were out on the floor voguing. (They now lead their own house, the International Royal Haus of Silk, in what’s known as the kiki scene, where younger people can get their start in ballroom.)

Mason brings a similar I-can-do-that confidence, but also a warmth, to Mistoffelees, describing the character as both a caretaker and “the one with the most tricks and the most antics.”

In addition to flashy moves like jumping up and landing in a straddle, Mason flaunts the subtler art of the runway walk in a kind of duet with their costume: a floor-skimming fur coat, a long black wig and a towering, tiaralike crown. “Everything about my outfit, my hair, my body — everything takes up space,” they said.

Striding down the runway, they exude a can’t-be-bothered attitude, while keeping an eye on their community at the ball. “If something goes wrong,” they said, “Mistoffelees has to be there to make it right.”

Dava Huesca

Witnessing Dava Huesca in the triple-threat role of Rumpleteazer, you can hardly believe she had no professional singing experience before “The Jellicle Ball.”

“I was afraid of singing,” she said. “I was like, ‘I’m a dancer. That’s all I do.’ But I wanted to be in ‘Cats’ so bad.” After not making the cut at several auditions, she signed herself up for vocal lessons, and soon she was hired.

Huesca, a graduate of the Conservatory of Dance at Purchase College and a member of the Haus of Telfar, already knew Lyons from taking his weekly vogue classes at Ripley-Grier Studios. “I really connected to his musicality,” she said. “He’s so good at finding all the little accents within any type of music.”

Landing a role with notable solo singing moments — in the comedic number “Mungojerrie & Rumpleteazer,” she and Jonathan Burke come out belting in New Jersey accents — Huesca has had to develop a whole new skill set for singing and voguing at the same time.

“The breathwork for dancing is second nature to me,” she said. But it doesn’t always align with the breathwork for singing. “It’s like choreographing a new way to breathe and generate sound, without sounding bad.” (She also sings through a virtuosic onstage costume change that she nails in 35 seconds.)

Huesca has picked up new voguing skills, too, performing the linear, militant Old Way style for the first time. With some coaching from Byrne, she figured out how to feel more like herself in movement that felt foreign at first. “That’s another reason I like voguing,” she said. “You have this outline, but you’re not supposed to look like every other person.”

Primo

Known as “the human tornado,” Primo, a member of the House of Donyale Luna, has earned a reputation in ballroom circles for his exhilarating spins and dips. He seems to defy the laws of physics as he whips his body around — multiple times, or with one leg lifted — and drops straight to the floor, landing with his spine arched and limbs stretched or bent to extremes.

He connects these abilities to his years of ballet training, which he began at 14 at the School for Creative and Performing Arts in Cincinnati. “A lot of dramatic vogue coincided with the tricks I used to do in men’s technique,” he said, referring to ballet’s athletic jumps and turns. But having the right mind-set matters, too. “You have to want to do it, and you can’t be afraid,” he said.

As Tumblebrutus — a character he describes as “a fun person” and “most definitely shady” — Primo lets his signature spins and dips fly. But he shines in other movement, too, like in a buoyant West African dance phrase in “Song of the Jellicles and the Jellicle Ball.”

Performed with dancers who were his rivals just a few numbers before, this celebratory section suggests they can still have fun together, he said: “It’s one of those moments of camaraderie and community, where we come together and we’re like: ‘Girl, let’s dance. Let’s have a little fab moment. Let’s kiki.’”

Both onstage and off, through photographs displayed during the show and outside the theater, “The Jellicle Ball” makes an effort to honor ballroom’s history and trailblazers. When Primo calls the production a “marriage of the old with the now,” he has chosen his words carefully.

“Not the new, but the now — the energy and freshness ballroom has in the public eye,” he said, “because ballroom has been around just as long as ‘Cats.’”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

August 28, 2024

Parrish Art Museum announces remarkable new additions to its collections

Crescent City Auction Gallery announces Sep 13-14th Important Estates Auction

Major works by Jacopo Bassano 16th-century master of the Venetian Renaissance at Sinebrychoff Art Museum

SJ Auctioneers announces online-only Super Luxury Jewelry, Silverware, Toys & Décor auction

National Gallery of Art receives gift of "The Nazi Drawings" by Mauricio Lasansky

Ancient tablets foretold doom awaiting Babylonian kings

2 men charged with damaging ancient rock formation at Lake Mead

Another new leader for Indianapolis museum roiled by racism outcry

Babe Ruth's 'Called Shot' jersey from 1932 World Series sells at Heritage Auctions for $24.12 million

The Met to present the first major exhibition dedicated to influential modernist architect Paul Rudolph

'A box of surprises': a Rotterdam apartment that's only 74 square feet

Brooklyn Museum announces more than 200 artists selected for The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition

3 Los Angeles museums team up to acquire art

De Pont will present the first solo exhibition of the iconic Colombian artist Beatriz González in the Netherlands

Jaclyn Conley: Castles In the Air opening September 5th at Maruani Mercier in Brussels

Zentrum Paul Klee to open first exhibition in Switzerland to provide an extensive insight into the modern art of Brazil

Rudy Franchi, who put movies at the center of a Technicolor life, dies at 85

Toned Morgan dollars and high-grade type coins assume starring roles at Heritage's Long Beach US Coins Auction

Dismantling the ship that drilled for the ocean's deepest secrets

The stuff they strut on the jellicle catwalk

CUE Art will open a solo exhibition by artist Tsohil Bhatia

Sebastian Gladstone announces Tristan Unrau: "Re-Enactment"

ICA/Boston presents the first U.S. museum survey of Charles Atlas

Exhibition of rare Shaker drawings to open at the American Folk Art Museum

How to Obtain a D7 Visa in Portugal in 2024: A Comprehensive Guide

The Hidden Symbolism of Numbers in Famous Artworks

Exploring New Horizons: Best E-Bikes for Touring and Adventure Seekers

All about online poker: where and how to learn to play?

Winning Strategies for Online Slots in the Philippines: Tips to Boost Your Chances

Long-term Disability Benefits Ontario: Essential Information and Steps

Designer Yingqian Zhu's Innovations are Transforming Media Literacy




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful