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April 2007

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European Tour

Our room here at the Doelen Hotel in Amsterdam opens out to a canal that might well be described as the Amsterdam of the imagination. Because the changing weather and the heat that comes with it are a reality in traditionally cool Amsterdam as well, we sleep with the windows open. The hubbub and clamor of dreams and the interior space have now given way to the reality of this charming city’s waking and applying itself. The sounds of bicycles, the stolid chugging of a distant motorboat, construction equipment punctuated by the maniacal cries of seagulls and other water birds establish the place and the time.

The tour has been moving along with all the expected drama and some that is unexpected as well. I hark back to the first public event I gave which was a press conference in Milan. There, in the official splendor of Milan’s city hall, across the square from La Scala, a predictably late conversation with the press turned into something a bit more like one of our too familiar faux news programs inflected towards comedia dell’arte. In mid-answer to a question about the themes of Blind Date, Mr. Vittorio Sgarbi, the Commissioner of Cultural Affairs in Milan, took his place next to me. Catching a fragment of the translator’s rendering of my answer to the question about our present Bush administration’s evangelical motivations, as I understood it from Bjorn, the translator and, two days later, La Republica’s dance writer, he objected to my accusation of an American theocracy and roared back that the theocracy is with “the Muslims.” “I would respect you more if you were performing this work in Libya, Iran or among the Shia in Iraq. They are the ones who suppress freedom of speech…”
Mr. Sgarbi took my questioning of the present social-political discourse as typified by the Bush administration as an affront. He felt it was his duty to shout me down in the most aggressive way possible. At one point, I informed the room that I was going to leave if the conversation didn’t turn back to Blind Date and he said, “No I will leave,” which he did with a flourish. I was told later that this is his modus operandi, that he is a showman TV personality, a kind of performance artist who uses his bully pulpit in much the same way that American reality shows pump the ratings and pull press coverage thru dubious and uncontrolled confrontations.

The performances of Blind Date at the Teatro Arcimboldi however were quite successful and we moved on.

Annemasse is a suburb community on the French side of the Swiss border adjacent to Geneva. Regain the Heart Condemned and Wynne and DBR joined us there for the second of three performances of Another Evening: I Bow Down (the first had been a run out from Milan to Cremona with cellist/composer Chris Lancaster substituting for DBR). Here is a brand new, plain-faced, community that revealed itself to us as a hopeful social vision during our time there. Every hue of individual could be seen in the streets going about their lives as the French are wont to do amidst the cafes, cheese and butcher shops, antiquarians, book sellers, etc. The bounteous weekly Friday market spoke loads about the priorities of the French. This modern vision, post colonial, post socialist at a time when the country was gearing up for its presidential elections, was made all the more meaningful thru my knowledge of what it had been 63 years ago when Bjorn’s mother, Dora Amelan, as a member of an underground organization, was secreting Jewish children across the frontier into Switzerland thru Annemasse. At that time, Annemasse was just another undistinguished French village among farms and fields caught in the German occupation. In our “circle” before the show wherein musicians, dancers, Janet Wong, Bjorn and myself collect to focus, I made a point of telling them how proud I was that not only that Dora succeeded in saving lives at that dark time, but that her son was amongst our ranks now as we indulge in the promise that defeating that enemy proposed.

And now, we’re here in Amsterdam, arguably the most liberal social experiment in the world. So many of the hot buttons in divisive issues (Gay rights, Gay marriage, legalized soft drugs, state subsidies for the arts, universal health care, etc) are a fact of life here. Speaking to a journalist for the Amsterdam weekly sometime back she was very interested in the Muslim question in Blind Date. Other than Asli Bulbul’s discussion of the modern Turkish flag, I told her that the work did not really deal in those specific polemics or dissections. I told her that it deals more in the bigger questions for all of us in “the West”. What do we believe in so strongly that we would fight to protect? I asked her if young Dutch choreographers and artists felt so strongly about their liberties and their heritage of progress and openness that they would die for these? Because she was interviewing me and not the other way around, this question went unanswered. Like global warming and the changes that it is inflicting on us, this question of values will not go away and, in fact, grows stronger each year. Blind Date was forged by this line of thought and now finds its life here as well.


-- Bill T. Jones (Monday, April 30, 2007)

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
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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