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June 2006

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Belligerence - Habit or Preference?

Here at the American Academy in Rome's beautiful Villa Aurelia. The rush hour traffic is going thru periodic paroxysms of nationalistic celebration, as it seems that the Italian team either won today's World Cup match or made a goal.

The World Cup match between the Italians and Americans last week, as everyone knows by now, became a bloody and demeaning spectacle. The European press roundly condemned both teams for their ungentlemanly behavior. The Americans predictably took special heat for some of their players', coach's and officials' language heavy reliance on metaphors of "war." Roger Cohen in the International Herald Tribune struggled for the high ground saying that it was all a matter of perception. Was the American team truly brutish and aggressive, or were they passionate and so fully committed that they dared believe in heroism, glory and an all or nothing approach to even a soccer game?

My personal feelings of superiority and disgust were muted somewhat as I look back at the last month or so in my own life and the life of the company. What springs to mind is the first night performance of Blind Date at the Spoleto USA Festival in Charleston, SC: It had been a difficult two days of preparation for what was ultimately a very successful evening marked by warm ovation and good notices the next day. However, my Achilles Heel flared up when, as we had left the stage and the applause was practically over, there was a lone heckler booing for all he was worth somewhere in the large house. Be it the heightened adrenaline in my system or expectation of disapproval from what I perceived to be a conservative community, I went ballistic charging back on the stage, demanding that the lights be turned up and that the dissident reveal himself, come down to the stage and that he and I would hash this out in public!

I received an email the next day from a self described "liberal and supporter of my work" chiding me for behaving as a schoolyard bully and depriving the audience member of his right to dissent. He was right!

The next day our presenter, Nunally Kersh, called and, in the most caring way possible, informed me that I would have to issue a statement to the media. One of the reporters expressed concern that a work like Blind Date that was "obviously anti-war," should be subverted by my belligerent behavior. I said to her that she shouldn't ascribe such an easy reading to the work! I thought that such a reduction flattened the ambiguity of the piece into a too easy polemic and a toothless one. The work's closing image of a young man lying still on stage is for me first and foremost a tragic reminder of a series of misperceptions and wrong moves. I said to her, as I said the following evening in a post-performance discussion that I would consider myself a belligerent person and that I try to instill in my dancers a passionate sense that there are things worth fighting for. What I did not say and what I am trying to understand in light of the blood spilled and the bellicose rhetoric of the World Cup spectacle is "what are those things worth fighting for and when and how do we recognize them?"

That seems to be the question driving my thought and creative work these days with the company. Chapel/Chapter, (the site specific work being created for Harlem Stage's new Gatehouse space to be premiered on December 5) which unfortunately exists much more in my head and heart right now than it does as an actual experience, wants to understand our responses as individuals and as members of the society to what is perceived as "evil acts" - murder, sadism, treachery...

In the sweltering Roman ghetto, right by the very place where in October 1943 Rome's Jews were gathered and deported, a young gallery owner said to me today that, though she is part American, she does not want to raise her children as Americans because, among other things, Americans frighten her. I could have reminded her of the spot in which we were standing and how, if there was a moment when one should have fought, that was certainly such a moment. But I didn't say that. In fact, a part of me agreed with her. Thinking back to Charleston, I would say, yes, I frighten myself and we as Americans frighten me as well.


-- Bill T. Jones (Tuesday, June 27, 2006)

Recent News

◊ Fela!
June 24, 2008

Bill T. Jones to Direct and Choreograph Fela! Off-Broadway

"Tony Award winner Bill T. Jones will direct and choreograph the world premiere of Fela!, a new musical based on the life of groundbreaking African composer, performer and activist Fela Anikulapo Kuti. Featuring a book by Jones and Jim Lewis, Fela! will feature Kuti's music performed live onstage by the band Antibalas and other members of the New York Afrobeat community. Its limited off-Broadway run begins previews at 37 Arts on July 29 with opening night set for September 4, and will play through September 21."

Read Article at Broadway.com
Read Notice in New York Times
For more information and tickets, visit FelaOffBroadway.

◊ 25th Aniversary
June 4, 2008

THE BILL T. JONES/ARNIE ZANE DANCE COMPANY TURNS 25

Plans include three premieres, an off Broadway show, the opening performances of BAM's Next Wave Festival, national and international tours

Consider the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company's 25th anniversary celebration a launching pad for its future. And what a future it promises: premieres, new venues, and a cornucopia of new ideas.

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Upcoming Performances

Chapel/Chapter
June 26-July 6, 2008
Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival
Doris Duke Theater
Becket, MA
Purchase Tickets


July 10-12, 2008
American Dance Festival
Durham, NC
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A Quarreling Pair
September 30-October 3, 2008
Brooklyn Academy of Music
BAM Next Wave Festival
718-636-4100
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Other Events

June 26, 2008  7:30 pm
June 28, 2008  11:00 pm
June 29, 2008  12:30 pm

Bill T. Jones will be featured on a show entitled Basic Black: A Conversation with bill T. Jones on WGBH and affiliate PBS Stations. WGBH Channel 2.

October 28, 2008

7:30 PM
Harlem Stage Gatehouse
Breaking Ground with Bill T. Jones, A Community Dialogue Series
"Harlem, Cultural Capital: Naming the Future"

For tickets: www.harlemstage.org