File - Ephrat Asherie
Transcription
File - Ephrat Asherie
ephrat asherie dance Contacts Ephrat Asherie 917.443.3527 [email protected] ! ! Ephrat!Asherie!Dance!(EAD)!is!an!urban!dance!theater!company!dedicated!to!creating!a!new! movement!language!that!combines!the!rawness!of!underground!styles!such!as!breaking,! house,!hip!hop!and!vogue!with!more!traditional!forms!of!dance!theater.!!EAD’s!first!evening! length!work,!A"Single"Ride,!earned!two!Bessie!nominations!in!2013!for!Outstanding! Emerging!Choreographer!and!Sound!Design.!The!company!explores!the!inherent!narrative! qualities!of!social!dance!as!a!means!to!tell!stories,!develop!innovative!imagery!and!find!new! modes!of!expression.!!EAD!has!presented!work!at!the!Apollo!Theater,!the!Amhanson! Theater,!Dixon!Place,!FiraTarrega,!New!York!Live!Arts,!the!River!to!River!Festival!and! Summerstage,!among!others.!!!Artistic!Director!Ephrat!Asherie!is!a!NYFA!artist!and!has! received!various!grants!and!awards!to!support!her!work.!These!include!a!Mondo!Cane!! commission!from!Dixon!Place,!a!Swing!Space!Grant!from!the!Lower!Manhattan!Cultural! Council,!two!residencies!through!the!CUNY!Dance!Initiative!and!a!Travel!and!Study!grant! from!the!Jerome!Foundation.!!Ephrat!was!a!2012W2013!Fresh!Tracks!Residency! choreographer!at!New!York!Live!Arts!and!2013W2014!Workspace!ArtistWinWResidence!with! the!Lower!Manhattan!Cultural!Council.!!!She!is!currently!a!choreographerWinWresidence!at! the!Alvin!Ailey!Dance!Center!as!part!of!the!New!Directions!Choreography!Lab.!!! ! Ephrat!has!performed!and!taught!throughout!the!U.S.!and!Europe,!as!well!as!in!Peru,!South! Africa!and!Israel.!She!has!appeared!on!NBC,!MTV,!Comedy!Central!and!at!City!Center,! Carnegie!Hall!and!Madison!Square!Garden.!!Ephrat!worked!on!the!creation!process!of!the! show!Magnifico,!directed!by!Andres!Heller!and!choreographed!by!Pilobolus.!She!is!a!regular! guest!artist!with!Rennie!Harris!Puremovement!and!has!worked!with!Ann!Marie!DeAngelo,! Michelle!Dorrance,!Doug!Elkins,!Bill!Irwin,!Cori!Olinghouse,!Gus!Solomons!Jr!and!Buddha! Stretch,!among!others.!! Ephrat!has!a!B.A.!in!Italian!Language!from!Barnard!College!and!is!an! MFA!candidate!at!University!of!Wisconsin.!!Ephrat!is!on!faculty!at!Broadway!Dance!Center! and!a!member!of!the!all!female!house!dance!collective,!MAWU.!!For!more!information!please! visit!www.ephratasherie.com. ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! [email protected] / 917.443.3527 / ephratasherie.com! PRESS%QUOTES% % Ephrat!“Bounce”!Asherie!invited!a!man,!James!“Cricket”!Colter,!to!perform!with!her!(and)!in! the!duet!“Step!4.2,”!Asherie!challenged!herself!to!push!the!form!beyond!two!dancers! performing!side!by!side;!the!spirited!result!is!more!like!a!pas!de!deux,!not!in!the!content! (Asherie’s!considerable!ballet!training!aside,!she’s!a!bona!fide!bWgirl,!and!this!piece!is!largely! composed!of!hipWhop!and!breaking!vocabulary)!but!in!the!powerful!connections!she!and! Colter!make!physically!and!emotionally.!Though!stylistically!different!—!Asherie!here!the! frisky!extrovert!to!Colter’s!comparatively!reticent!introvert!—!this!is!a!great!match,!the!two! bound!by!a!palpable!chemistry.! ! In!her!2011!solo!“brothers,”!Asherie!is!both!tough!and!vulnerable:!swaggering!and!gripping! her!crotch!like!one!of!the!guys!one!moment;!running!her!hands!softly!down!her!undulating! torso!the!next.!Asherie!has!an!authoritative!stage!presence!and!can!convey!even! archetypical!behavior!without!succumbing!to!cliché.! Janine!Parker,!Boston!Globe,!June!2014,!! ! ! ! Asherie!and!Colter's!feet!seem!to!flicker!a!few!inches!in!the!air!throughout!"Step!4.2."! They're!like!a!modernWday!Fred!Astaire!and!Ginger!Rogers,!flying!around!the!stage!on!their! feet,!knees,!elbows!and!any!other!part!of!the!body!that!moves!in!perfect!unison.! Ken!Ross,!Masslive.com,!June!2014,!! ! ! “…Ms.!Asherie,!a!hipWhop!BWgirl!versed!in!seemingly!every!style!of!street!dance…Her!mashW up!of!Latin!hustle,!salsa,!breaking!and!house!was!fabulous.!! ! Siobhan!Burke,!The!New!York!Times!! ! ! “Where!those!choreographers!stumble,!Ephrat!Asherie!succeeds.!One!of!her!numbers...has! her!slinking!in!a!red!dress!to!“It’s!a!Man’s!Man’s!Man’s!World,”!and!the!way!she!keeps!falling! to!her!back!but!also!spinning!on!it!—!she’s!an!adept!BWgirl!—!eloquently!and!subtly!salutes! and!questions!(James)!Brown’s!immeasurable!impact!on!hipWhop!alongside!his!troubling! treatment!of!women.!That’s!the!high!point!of!meaning.”!! ! ! Brian!Seibert,!The!New!York!Times!! ! ! This!clever!development!was!mirrored!by!dancer!Ephrat!Asherie!in!"It's!a!man's!world."! ...the!work!explored!the!breakdancing!technique!to!(James)!Brown's!music.!Asherie! displayed!technical!prowess!in!a!series!of!windmills!and!body!patterns!with!great! musicality,!while!showing!an!artistic!development!of!Brown’s!movement!influences.!This! Asherie!also!did!in!her!later!work!"Out!of!Sight",!adding!"vougueing"!to!the!movement! vocabulary!with!thrilling!effect.”!! Jermaine!Rowe,!BWW!Dance!World! [email protected] / 917.443.3527 / ephratasherie.com! ! “Ephrat! "Bounce"! Asherie,! whose! solo! Brothers! I! enjoyed! at! Dixon! Place! last! year,! led! the! evening!with!Sonatina"(in"three"movements),!a!title!offering!no!hint!of!what!would!come.!The! IsraeliWborn! dancer,! steeped! in! the! ways! of! hip! hop! and! club! dancing,! is! compact! and! forceful.!In!Sonatina,!she!flings!and!splatters!angular!movement!against!space!but!manages! to! do! so! with! wit,! musicality! and! the! kind! of! upfront,! audienceWsnaring! presentation! I! associate! more! with! jazz! dance! than! contemporary! dance.! Bounce! is,! I! think,! working! on! being!a!star!and!should!get!there!in!due!time.”! ! Eva!Yaa!Asantewaa,!InfiniteBody,!Feb!5,!2012! ! ! “The! slight,! sinewy! Asherie! (aka! Bounce)! blew! the! audience! away! with! her! handsomelyW arranged! and! expert! breaking,! club! dancing! and! vogueing.! Simply! put,! it's! great! to! see! a! woman!completely!own!the!floor:!not!just!be!capable!of!these!dance!styles!but!actually!nail! every!challenge!of!timing,!accuracy!of!detail,!flow!and!theatrical!presentation!that!she!has! set! for! herself.! This! solo! might! be! a! workWinWprogress,! but! I! think! the! only! work! left! to! be! done!would!be!for!Asherie!to!add!more!because!we!would!probably!be!content!to!watch!her! forever.”! Eva!Yaa!Asantewaa,!InfiniteBody,!July!6,!2011! " “NMQP,!mixes!elegant!ballet!and!complicated!bWboy!stalls!and!holds.!Set!to!the!music!of!Nina! Simone!and!performed!and!choreographed!by!Ephrat!Asherie,!this!one!woman!combination! of!styles!uses!the!entire!stage!and!a!lot!of!air!space.!The!elegant!beauty!of!the!balletic!and! jazzWinspired! combinations! contrasts! pleasantly! with! the! technical! and! impossible! feats! of! strength! associated! with! the! bWboy! styles! incorporated.! Asherie! also! choreographed! and! danced!in!A"House"is"Not"A"Home,!an!allegory!for!what!might!happen!in!the!down!time!at!a! brothel! set! to! a! rolling! and! poignant! night! club! beat—the! stage! virtually! shakes! with! the! force!and!passion!of!the!staccato!dance!movements.!The!standouts!are!Asherie!and!Big!Tara,! a! 6WandWaWhalfWfootWtall! black! man! who! could! have! been! a! linebacker! for! the! Eagles! but! instead! performs! dressed! in! a! black! lace! flapper! dress! replete! with! pearls! and! tiara.! The! movements!are!ambitious!and!taken!in!rounds,!much!like!a!breaking!cypher,!but!assuredly! with! roots! in!Vogueing!and! what! is! less! commonly! known! as!Whacking! (whether! acknowledged!or!not,!though!given!Asherie's!resume,!I'm!sure!it's!intentional).! ! ! !!!Robert!Tumas,!L!Magazine,!June!3,!2010! ! ! [email protected] / 917.443.3527 / ephratasherie.com! A version of this article appeared September 17, 2012, on page A27 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Dispatching a New Train of Thought. Dispatching a New Train of Thought By LIZZIE SIMON Demetrius Fordham Ephrat Asherie's 'A Single Ride' "Last summer I started to realize I spend more time on the subway than being with my family and friends," said choreographer Ephrat Asherie, whose new show, "A Single Ride," is inspired by her life in New York's transit system. "All the rhythms, the sounds, the smells, they were in my skin. They were affecting me and my art." To Ms. Asherie, the subway is a place of extremes, a simultaneously public and private setting where, in addition to getting from A to B, riders find elation, exhaustion and occasionally a place to cry. "People clip their toenails and spit out sunflower seeds like they're in their living rooms," she said. "It's the best kind of performance art.'" The Harlem-based choreographer was born in Israel but raised in Italy and Westchester. She grew up training in ballet and didn't take break-dancing to be her life's work until she saw Rennie Harris's company, Puremovement, perform "Rome and Jewels," a hip-hop version of Romeo and Juliet. As a senior at Barnard, Ms. Asherie discovered a free breaking practice offered at the Bushwick Hylan Community Center. Over time she became a regular. "A Single Ride," which was commissioned by Dixon Place, is Ms. Asherie's first full-length show. Looking over the numbers we asked her to assemble about her project, we were impressed that the six dancers in her show speak a total of seven languages. "I know, we're pretty diverse," she said. "But that's just New York living." —Lizzie Simon The Jewish Standard http://www.jstandard.com/index.php/content/print/20321/ A voice for the underground A Dancer voice forfor the underground A voice the underground Ephrat Asherie passionately prefers breaking to ballet Dancer Ephrat Asherie passionately prefers breaking to ballet _JStandardDvora Meyers | Dance | Published: 07 October 2011 Dancer Ephrat Asherie passionately prefers breaking to balle Dvora Meyers _JStandardDvora Meyers | Dance | Published: 07 October 2011 Pub Ephrat Asherie, whose path to becoming a top break dancer began in college, performs an air chair freeze. Near the start of the dance performance piece “Brothers,” break dancer and choreographer Ephrat Asherie turns and faces the audience dressed like a boy. Her long brown hair is covered by a black bandana and she wears a plain red sleeveless sweatshirt. Her baggy jeans are ripped open, thigh down to shin, which exposes her black kneepads, a basic piece of equipment for any b-girl. Completing the gender-bending look are her arms, which are so chiseled they would make Madonna envious. The soundtrack, which until this point had been a series of fast percussive beats, falls away and the voices of two of Asherie’s older brothers, Gil and Neer, fill the small space at Dixon Place, an experimental theater venue in downtown Manhattan. They, along with two other elder Asherie boys, are the titular “brothers” of the piece, and in their narration they recount the myriad ways they picked on her. Despite the harassment growing up, Ephrat, the youngest and only girl, wanted to be just like them. “They were the coolest people I knew,” the Israeli-born Asherie, 30, explains of the four older siblings she chased throughout her childhood in suburban New York’s Westchester County. “They could run faster than me, they could ride their bikes faster,” she says, laughing. Eventually she went from chasing her brothers and playing soccer to ballet — at the behest of her mother, who wanted to see her do something a bit more feminine. After years of studying ballet and modern dance, however, Asherie returned to her Ephrat Asherie, whose becoming top break dancer in College, college,a performs an airaffiliated chair freeze. rough-and-tumble rootspath whento she discoveredabreak dancing while atbegan Barnard women’s school with Columbia University, where she studied Italian. Ephrat Asherie, whose path to becoming a top break dancer began in college, performs an air ch flaws’of the dance performance piece “Brothers,” break dancer and choreographer Ephra Near thestart of the dance performance piece “Brothers,” break dancer and choreographer Ephrat start NearNo ‘figure the In lessturns than aand decade since graduating, has taught break dancing all overbrown the world, including in Europe, Asherie faces the dressed like a boy. Heris long hair covered byIsrael a and and she wears a audience dressed like aaudience boy. Asherie Her long brown hair covered by ais black bandana South America. She also has appeared in music videos, and on music award shows and television programs, notably black bandana and she wears a plain red sleeveless sweatshirt. Her baggy jeans are ripped open, sweatshirt. HerLive.” baggy jeans are ripped open, thigh down to shin, which exposes her black kneepa “Saturday Night thighIn down to shin, which exposes her black kneepads, a basic piece of equipment for any b-girl. breaking,for as itany is oftenb-girl. called by its practitioners, known as b-boys and b-girls, Asherie found a respite from leotards, tights, equipment Completing the gender-bending look are her are arms,her which are so chiseled makethey would make Madon Completing the gender-bending look arms, which arethey so would chiseled 1 of 3Madonna envious. 9/20/12 1:26 PM The soundtrack, which until this point had been a series of fast percussive beats, falls away and th older brothers, Gil and Neer, fill the small space at Dixon Place, an experimental theater venue in along with two other elder Asherie boys, are the titular “brothers” of the piece, and in their narratio ways they picked on her. Despite the harassment growing up, Ephrat, the youngest and only girl, “They were the coolest people I knew,” the Israeli-born Asherie, 30, explains of the four older sibli her childhood in suburban New York’s Westchester County. The soundtrack, which until this point had been a series of fast percussive beats, falls away and the voices of two of Asherie’s older brothers, Gil and Neer, fill the small space at Dixon Place, an experimental theater venue in downtown Manhattan. They, along with two other elder Asherie boys, are the titular “brothers” of the piece, and in their narration they recount the myriad ways they picked on her. Despite the harassment growing up, Ephrat, the youngest and only girl, wanted to be just like them. “They were the coolest people I knew,” the Israeli-born Asherie, 30, explains of the four older siblings she chased throughout her childhood in suburban New York’s Westchester County. “They could run faster than me, they could ride their bikes faster,” she says, laughing. Eventually she went from chasing her brothers and playing soccer to ballet — at the behest of her mother, who wanted to see her do something a bit more feminine. After years of studying ballet and modern dance, however, Asherie returned to her rough-and-tumble roots when she discovered break dancing while at Barnard College, a women’s school affiliated with Columbia University, where she studied Italian. No ‘figure flaws’ In less than a decade since graduating, Asherie has taught break dancing all over the world, including in Europe, Israel and South America. She also has appeared in music videos, and on music award shows and television programs, notably “Saturday Night Live.” In breaking, as it is often called by its practitioners, known as b-boys and b-girls, Asherie found a respite from leotards, tights, and mirrors that only seemed to highlight her figure flaws. “I didn’t have to look like anybody else or be super skinny,” she says of the difference between ballet and street dance, which is typically performed in baggy attire, hats and sneakers. “I loved the music and the freedom I first saw in it. The freedom to not have to be self-critical. I could just enjoy the music.” As for her attraction to genres such as breaking and hip hop, which the Harlem resident teaches at dance studios throughout New York, including at the prestigious Broadway Dance Center, she explains, “For me, all of the dances that are rooted in an African tradition are so much more soulful than anything I’ve ever encountered in my life.” None of this mattered, however, during her first encounters with breaking. While she acknowledges the unsophisticated sound, Asherie confesses, “I was drawn to it because it was dope. It was just freakin’ awesome. “Why wouldn’t everybody want to do that?” she asks, as though it is a rhetorical question. “It didn’t even occur to me not to fall in love.” Asherie feels the same ardor for the b-girl’s favorite apparatus. “I just really love the floor,” she says. Most of the iconic breaking moves — headspins, windmills and backspins — are done on or near the ground. As a result, these elements, even at their most extreme, connote a sense of play, like kids palling around. After all, this is how the dance form evolved — young adolescents in New York City fooling around on the concrete until they stumbled on a new dope skill, which they honed. Chicago roots The same sense of play pervaded the entire Dixon Place showcase. In keeping with the childhood centric trope of “Brothers,” Asherie assigned the theme “looking back” to the rest of the dancers. In addition to performing a solo piece, she participated in two group routines with her house dance group, Mawu, an all-female crew. The opening piece, titled “Playground,” had the four women dressed in young girls’ school uniforms enacting a schoolyard scene with house dance elements. This is not the “Jersey Shore”-style of house dance, however, which entails techno, fist pumps, and vigorous pointing at the beat. Underground house dance arose from the Chicago disco scene in the 1970s and incorporates several styles, including salsa and African, but with a smoothness and attention to the groove. Often, the nimble and intricate footwork makes it seem like the dancer is tap dancing without taps. One particularly original moment in the set had the ladies of Mawu miming a game of double dutch jump rope to a funk-techno beat. Adding to the “years gone by,” at least for Asherie, was the performance of Claudia AartsSchrieber; she and Asherie studied ballet together as youngsters in Westchester. Aarts-Schrieber stayed with ballet, eventually joining the Norwegian National Ballet in Oslo. Aarts-Schrieber’s presence on the stage provided a stark example of “the road not taken.” Not that Asherie regrets veering away from the more traditional modes, even as she faces the uphill battle, like all underground dancers, of trying to turn her passion into a paycheck. “There’s no hip-hop company that will pay you the way” a modern dance company, such as Alvin Ailey, “pays their dancers,” she observes. “With underground dancers, a lot of the pioneers end up teaching overseas and doing most of their work overseas, which is a really sad thing because there is not enough work for them here,” Asherie says. “So what is the next generation supposed to do? That’s where a lot of us in my generation have got to create our own thing, find your own way.” That is where nights such as the one Asherie curated at Dixon Place come in. When Asherie reached out to the dance community about performing, she expected just a few to respond. She was pleasantly surprised by the enthusiastic response. In addition to herself and Mawu, five other individual performers and groups agreed to participate. Appreciation and respect “I don’t think there are so many opportunities in the theater setting,” she explains. Although the dancers were willing to perform sans pay, Asherie raised $2,000 to compensate them. “I wanted to show that I’m a dancer and choreographer, and I’m fighting for all of us to have a better life,” she said. “We shouldn’t have to do shows for free.” Such concerns reflect a hard reality about breaking — even if you book the big commercial gig, it still does not secure the future. “What’s the next step?” Asherie wonders. For her part, Asherie plans to take the money she makes from her more commercial work to finance the theatrical pieces — more repertory shows of shorter pieces and then, hopefully, an evening length piece at a bigger venue. “I want underground styles to be appreciated and respected in many different contexts. In the contexts they were created — the street, the club, battles. But also on stage,” she says. And it is onstage, after the music stops and her brothers finish narrating their tales of childhood torture — and after she finishes dancing, jumping and backspinning her way across the floor — that Asherie again faces the audience, tugs off the bandana and lets her long hair loose. She may no longer be a ballerina or the tomboy who chased after her brothers at her own peril, but onstage, she brought those personas together to become a voice for the underground.