LehrerDance Rocks Houston!


2/6/2010 LehrerDance, on loan from Buffalo, New York last weekend for JCC of Houston's 30th annual Dance Month celebration, didn't have me at "hello." But it only took until the "how are ya?" for choreographer Jon Lehrer's musical and intuitive repertory and his plucky cast to ensnare me.
When a company is more than 1200 miles from home in an unfamiliar city for only two performances, it can feel like there's only one chance to get it right. The dancers were perhaps shaking off some jitters in the opening moments of
Iambus but the long and short was they seemed a bit stiff in a rendering of Bobby McFerrin and Yo-Yo Ma's "Grace." They hit their stride with the energetic bounce of McFerrin's "Kalimba Suite" but at the start of the company's second offering, Loose Canon, I found myself uncertain about where my encounter with LehrerDance was headed. Wearing pajamas, the five dancers begin in repose, tossing and turning to the strains of nuptial warhorse, Pachelbel's Canon in D. Even when those half notes are announced through Wynton Marsalis's horn they seem a bit timeworn. David Parson's Sleep Study came to mind. It is a classic crowd-pleaser but pretty familiar territory for comedic dancing. I didn't yet know choreographer Jon Lehrer well enough to be sure he had his tongue firmly planted in his cheek so, just as I was beginning to think this wasn't going to end well, Lehrer pushed the rewind button (literally). Suddenly the trajectory of Loose Canon shifts. Clearly of its own mind and responding to some vibrato itch, Jennifer Huffman's hand wriggles away from her and the men manage to pull off a not-so-petite cygnet parody. Mass head-bobbling breaks out among the cast, and gaping mouths emulate the canon's lingering finale. Funny and facetious, Lehrer's mad, musical interpretation freshened up the score and put the audience (myself included) right in the palm of his hand to be carried along for the ride.
The dancers sport a no-fuss, body-hugging wardrobe, provided by company costume designer Cindy Darling and are bathed in glowing pools by lighting designer Kam Hobbs. Hobbs' work was a solid throughline in an evening of mixed repertory, his use of vivid color and dynamic changes most evident in
Fused by 7.
The performers are a septet with distinctive instrumentation. Like a good jazz composer, Lehrer knows how to flaunt each of his dancer's unique qualities. Rehearsal director and a founding member of the young company, Marideth Wanat is versatile and can deliquesce into harmonies. However, with a spunk that sets her apart, she captivates when working alone, as in her emotive solo
The Way Within. Chosen recently as one of Dance Magazine's "25 to Watch," Wanat is the saxophone. Theodore Krzykowski trumpets the high notes, his blasts of fluid floor work and gymnastic dexterity electrified the performance. Jennifer Huffman, bringing skillful support and personality to the troupe, is the trombone. Immanuel Naylor, Joseph Roth, Kristen Stein, and Charity Newton complete the group's rhythm section, each player is individual and vital in Lehrer's hands, right down to the improvisational curtain call.
Refreshingly unforeseen is the renouncement of all things cynical on Lehrer's program. From the idyllic ménage presented in
Trois, to the energetic and playful, Ritual Dynamic, the audience is invited to enjoy pure yet perceptive entertainment. I've read that a jazz composer's role is to build a musical framework that suggests or implies more than it sets down. Beneath Lehrer's contemporary jazz soundtrack is a sophisticated fusion of classic movement vocabularies and all-things-considered choreography. Those who notice only the dazzling acrobatic partnering by the amorphically clad Huffman and Krzykowski are missing something in the magical and very human Morphic Slip.
Though I analogize LehrerDance to a musical jazz ensemble, and though Jon Lehrer has roots in Giordano's Jazz Dance Chicago, the company resists typecasting as a modern or jazz dance ensemble.  If there is something you
can expect from this work, it is that it is going to go somewhere unexpected. This delightful trend is what brought the JCC audience to its feet. "Y'all come back now." LehrerDance is welcome any time on Houston turf.
Nichelle Strzepek

"Quantum leaps & surprise shifts of effort and flow highlight Lehrer’s work"

Lehrerdance
Genessee Theatre
Waukegan, IL
9-26-09
Reviewed By
Lynn Colburn Shapiro
Dance Writer and Chicago Correspondent for Dance Magazine

Jon Lehrer showcased his expanding stylistic range and vibrant choreographic palette at Waukegan’s historic Genessee Theatre this past September. LehrerDance, only two years old, already shows a distinctive movement signature and richness of repertory that take most companies years to develop. Lehrer’s smart programming mixed Bach with jazz, athletics with lyricism, and story with the abstract.

In
Fused By 8, (2009), the sculpted musicality of Immanuel Naylor’s powerful opening and closing solos, set to Bach’s Brandenburg #3, framed the musically diverse full-company piece, exploring a bound world of curved space ready to explode. Lehrer’s movement entered the music so completely as to become its visual realization. Challenging unseen spatial constraints, tightly-wound, high-force group trajectories embodied Bach’s musical complexity and integrated the urgency of “Black Violin’s” jazz variations. Lehrer grapples with this theme in the breath-taking duet section in which Jennifer Huffman and Joseph Roth defy the limits of body and balance in daring horizontal and off-center vertical lifts. The ensemble’s entrances and exits build a fugue of musical and movement motifs combining on-a-dime transitions from floor to standing to seemingly weightless flight. Quantum leaps and surprise shifts of effort and flow highlight Lehrer’s work .

In
Trois, also new this year, Lehrer explores the possibilities and permutations of three partnering dancers in a playful movement anagram. Dancers Roth, Naylor, and Kristen Stein launch into a revelry of body parts, in unison, opposition, and counterpoint, swinging, rocking, balancing, pushing and pulling each other to the cadence of Amiina’s score for guitar, drums, and bells. Their quietly exuberant interplay exemplifies the fluid technique and strong spinal core that anchor Lehrer’s movement impulses.

The eight LehrerDancers’ distinctiveness owes much to their versatility in Lehrer’s fusion of dance forms, which seamlessly melds dare-devil gymnastics into lyrical movement phrases, as in
A Ritual Dynamic (2006). They peddle an infectious brand of humor with dramatic flare in Loose Canon (2006) and Bridge and Tunnel (2002). While developing striking clarity of attack in the ensemble, Lehrer maximizes individual strengths in The Way Within (2007), an introspective solo for Merideth Wanat, and Morphic Slip (2009), an other-worldly duet for Jennifer Huffman and the astoundingly acrobatic Theodore Kryzkowski.
Completing this already delightful evening, each dancer burst onstage for a solo riff on the sheer joy of dancing. Their warmth and personalities shone brightly that night, and left both the audience and Genessee Street bathing in their afterglow.




Dancers bring high energy to stage

For their first appearance at Artpark, Buffalo’s LehrerDance offered up a program of their most popular repertory works along with three premieres all choreographed by artistic director Jon Lehrer.
The 2-year-old national touring company gave the appreciative Artpark audience a healthy dose of the Lehrer style of dance he calls “organic athleticism,” which mixes a number of dance styles and resulted Friday night in several outbursts of boisterous applause and a standing ovation at program’s end.
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Dynamic Peromance by LehrerDance

Dynamic performance by LehrerDance in Norfolk, VA
By BalletCenter Blog | March 17, 2009
Rafael Delgado

This past March 5th, 2009, I had the opportunity to watch a dynamic performance by an innovative contemporary dance company from Buffalo, NY. The performance was part of the 8th Regional Dance Festival in Norfolk, VA and was hosted by the Governor's School for the Arts.  The name of the company is Lehrer Dance under the direction of Jon Lehrer. 
This gravity defying group of seven dancers and a single choreographer offers a jazz/modern/gymnastics/break-dancing/circus/capoeira unique style of movement that is not flashy as you may expect, but breathtaking.  The company describes it as "Organically Athletic"; I describe it as "Fun to Watch!”
Years ago, I had the opportunity to work and share as dancers with Jon Lehrer, at that time his comedic skills were already well developed.  So, I was not surprised to see as the opening of the program "Loose Canon", a light dance piece with impeccable comedic timing, set to the all too familiar Pachelbel's Canon in D Major.
"Loose Canon" central figure was performed by Jennifer Huffman, a petite dancer with beautifully pointed feet, who rapidly became my favorite performer that evening.  During this piece, she was strong and funny. Later in the evening, during cirque-de-soleil-ish "Morphic Slip", Ms. Huffman displayed incredible athleticism and wonderful lifting skills while she was partnered by Theodore Krzykowski, a young man of short stature but gigantic stage presence.
We were given an exceptional opportunity to follow Dance Magazine's advice to watch Marideth Wanat perform in "The Way Within", a solo full of lyricism and contolled precision. Ms. Wanat was honored as one of the "25 to Watch" by Dance Magazine in 2009.
The commanding Immanuel Naylor, together with Mr. Krzykowski, danced in the primal duet "Instict". We were once again amazed by Jennifer Huffman, this time in "La Fuite" (The Escape), where she danced with Kristen Stein. They were delicate and vulnerable, then strong and virile, yet androgynous in the portrayal of, perhaps, mermaids - as hinted in the program notes by a short poem by Jannet Corneto.
As a finale the company performed "A Ritual Dynamic", a street dance meets modern technique, full company piece that made the audience jump to their feet in thunderous approval. 

Extended Views gives timely topics unique spins

'Extended Views' gives timely topics unique spins
By Lucia Mauro | Special to the Tribune
November 9, 2007
 
Choreographic development has been a long-term goal of John Schmitz, co-founder/artistic director of Dance Chicago, the monthlong festival spotlighting local dance artists at the Athenaeum Theatre. On Wednesday, he inaugurated a variation on that theme with "Extended Views," a program featuring a condensed body of work by two choreographers with strong Chicago ties: Jon Lehrer, formerly of Giordano Jazz Dance Chicago, and independent artist Dmitri Peskov.

Both men recently started their own companies: LehrerDance in Buffalo and Dmitri Peskov and Dancers here. Each exhibited a clear point of view, with Lehrer taking a more athletic-theatrical route and Peskov favoring dark, distraught subjects. On the surface, their approaches appeared vastly different. Yet, in their own way, both have crafted tragicomedies that speak of love, betrayal, conflict, primal urges and cosmic mysteries.

"Extended Views," a substantial evening of expression, allowed audiences to peer into the minds of the two choreographers exploring timely issues in unexpected and intelligent ways.

One of Lehrer's most astute pieces is "Loose Canon," which plays off Pachelbel's "Canon in D Major" as a cry for liberation in a vague asylum of the mind. Humorous without being hurtful, it expanded into a feast of body contortions and lush physical dexterity by Lisa Ientilucci, Marideth Wanat, Matthew Farmer, Ted Krzykowski and Immanuel Naylor. Lehrer's male duet, "Instinct," has a clay-like feel, as if Lehrer shapes his war paint-covered dancers (Naylor and Farmer) into mounds of conjoined earth awaiting an unknown enemy.

The program was framed by two of Lehrer's solid but less adventurous pure-movement orchestrations: "Iambus," in which the ensemble is transformed into aquatic life, from darting eels to lilting anemones; and the new "A Ritual Dynamic," a magnetic eruption of bodily shapes.

Dance Magazine

Dance Magazine
LehrerDance
Athenaeum Theatre, Chicago, IL
November 7, 2007
Reviewed by Lynn Shapiro
 
The Chicago premiere of LehrerDance took the house not so much by storm as by quantum physics. As part of the month-long Dance Chicago festival, Jon Lehrer’s strikingly original choreography transformed the stage into an energy field of super-charged particles.
Rich movement invention coupled with high-risk partnering were signatures of Lehrer’s choreography throughout the four pieces. He seamlessly integrated his dancers’ gymnastic skills with modern dance forms. Surprise landings and tableaux that sliced space into unexpected geometrics kept the audience on the edge of their seats.
   
Iambus showcases the sunny “I love to dance” exuberance of all seven athletic members of Lehrer’s newly formed company. Set to taped music of Bobby McFerrin and Yo Yo Ma, the piece is rooted in the contrast between flow and sculpted multi-body constructions. The dancers happily invade each other’s space to connect, break apart, and recombine with daring speed and high-flying abandon. Their swift transfers of energy create both riveting visual design and breathtaking physical excitement.
   
Loose Canon exercises a deliciously restrained sense of caprice. Lehrer’s humor capitalizes on Ted Kryzkowski’s acrobatic ability as the unassuming victim of his fellow dancers’ manipulation. Contrasting Palchelbel’s bucolic Canon in D major, voice commands such as, “Stop! Rewind!” and “Use humor to get your point across!” add to the irony and surprise of the choreography. Wild near misses and unconventional couplings of women lifting men brought a change of pace the audience welcomed with raucous laughter and applause.
    Lehrer’s affinity for air-born antics doesn’t keep him from making stunning use of the floor and stationary movement in the duet
Instinct. Dancers Matthew Farmer and Immanuel Naylor assault the ground, their ritualistic gestures less giving into gravity than diving into it. Animal energy seethes as the two predatory beings move from mutual dependence through the pain of emerging independence, to the breach that finally separates them. The power and dramatic tension of their bodies connecting and separating casts the space between them as a third partner.
    In the final piece, the premiere of
A Ritual Dynamic, the dancers snap into action like rubber bands pulled to the max, launching their bodies into flight, aimed seemingly at thin air. Then, miraculously, another body materializes from the ether of moving space, and zot! They hit their human targets mid-flight, cradle in each other’s arrested motion for one luxurious moment, and move on.