The Phantom Project

Evoking A Phantom

In the early eighties, the future was a theoretical, poetic proposition for Bill T. Jones and Arnie Zane. Although Bill kept a journal, he and Arnie had no interest in maintaining repertory. They were interested in the next piece. And, the piece after that. Every piece should be made fresh and new, they believed. When a work outlived its usefulness, it should be allowed to fall away. Luckily for the dance world, however, an anniversary necessitates looking back as well as looking forward. Today, having arrived at the Twentieth Anniversary Season, the Company finds itself reviving old works, while creating anew; questioning the ephemeral nature of dance itself, while celebrating the lasting reputation they have earned within the dance community.

The Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company's 20th Anniversary Celebration, The Phantom Project, is the first of a multi-year effort. It is an attempt to come to grips with the daunting task of representing this Company's creative output over 20 plus years.

"Because our choreographic and theatrical investigation has been broad and evolutionary, any attempt to retrieve a work from the past is like trying to evoke a phantom," says Jones.

Recollection is a constantly elusive process. So much depends on where the choreographer's mind was and what questions were being asked at the time.

"Revival involves even more questions--putting something on and trying it out until one finds a facsimile or place that is personal and representative of what was inside oneself."

Zane and Jones were trying to build something then. Is it ever the same thing now?

Season Highlights

The Phantom Project - 20th Anniversary Season
The season kicks off with 10 performances at The Kitchen in New York City, September 9 - 20, 2003. The Kitchen provides an opportunity to recall Bill and Arnie's seminal early duets and solos, involving extreme intimacy in partnering and talking. Much of the revival work has never been performed by anyone other than Bill and Arnie. Today, the casting ranges from two tall blond women, to two short African American women, to an African American man and a Chinese man. The new readings of these early works make them fresh again and offers the opportunity for a new generation of viewers to experience them. Bill T. Jones will participate in the programs as narrator/performer as he screens and contextualizes various works.

Our Kitchen season also boasts two events in conjunction with the live performances. On Thursday, September 18, journey through the company's vibrant 20-year history with Bill T. Jones and long-time collaborators and supporters at a TV Dinner panel discussion including video screenings and a vegetarian dinner prior to the evening's performance. Fellow panelists include Gregory Bain, Production Manager and Archivist (1982-2003), Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company; Elizabeth Zimmer, dance critic, The Village Voice; and Robert Longo, artist. Plus, throughout the month of September The Kitchen Art Gallery will be exhibiting remastered video documentation of Bill and Arnie's early works including Monkey Run Road, Floating the Tongue, and Four Duets found in The Kitchen's prestigious archive.

Then, on February 3 - 7, 2004, four performances at the esteemed Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) represent a different itinerary -- remembering Bill and Arnie's initial invitation there in 1984 when they became part of the first generation of Next Wave Artists. Included on the program at BAM will be The Phantom Project: Still/Here Looking On, a re-examination of Bill's highly controversial Still/Here from 1994 in the context of 30 years of creation, Reading, Mercy and the Artificial Nigger, our latest work, Another Another History of Collage, a reworking of Bill and Arnie's last collaboration, and The Gift/No God Logic, a requiem for four dancers that was one of Arnie's last works.

The celebration expands outside of New York throughout the year, as the Company tours across the country and abroad, including performances in Spain, France, the United Kingdom, Canada, Texas, Florida, and Ohio.

The anniversary season also pays homage to Arnie's photography with an exhibition of his photographic and magic lantern work at the Paula Cooper Gallery in downtown New York.

Bill's Blog

◊ Harlem Crawl
January 22, 2008

Hey Black Man!" composer/musician Craig Harris said to me last night giving me a firm handshake in the first moments of what was to be a five hour exploratory/research/investigation tour of the Harlem scene.

◊ Happy New Year
January 9, 2008

Happy New Year!

It is raining outside Woodbox, our little retreat on the mesa of Northern New Mexico. The past two weeks have been blissfully quiet - a fitting respite after this intense though rewarding year.

Bill T. Jones Online

Recent News

◊ Wandering the World in Search of Herself
November 11, 2008

By CLAUDIA LA ROCCO
Published in the New York Times:
October 1, 2008

"From the start of "A Quarreling Pair," which opened on Tuesday at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Next Wave Festival, you feel that you have been plunged deep inside a private world."

Read Article in NY Times

◊ Village Voice Reviews A Quarreling Pair
November 11, 2008

Bill T. Jones Adapts a Poetic Puppet Play
By Deborah Jowitt

"Bill T. Jones is full of surprises. Who'd imagine he'd turn Jane Bowles's eccentrically poetic 1945 puppet play, A Quarreling Pair, into a parable in the form of a variety show....

Read Article in Village Voice

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Upcoming Performances

Chapel/Chapter
November 27-29
Creteil, France

Chapel/Chapter
December 4-5, 2008
Rome, Italy

Chapel/Chapter
January 19-25, 2009
Mercat de Flores
Barcelona, Spain

Other Events

November 11, 2008, 4:30-6:00 PM
Interview with Bill T. Jones by Deborah McDowell
Sponsored by the Carter G. Woodson Institute
Newcomb Hall Ballroom
Reception to follow
General Admission, no tickets necessary.

November 13, 2008, 12:30-1:30 PM
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company Lecture/Demonstration
Paramount Theater
215 E. Main St.
Charlottesville, Virginia.
General Admission, no tickets necessary.