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Dance Magazine, April, 2000
ANN REINKING, Ben Stevenson, and David Parsons are the recipients of the Dance Magazine Awards for the year 2000, continuing a tradition of presentations established in 1954. With invited guests in attendance, the awardees will be honored at a party April 10 at the Merkin Concert Hall in Manhattan. Dance Magazine Senior Editor Clive Barnes chairs the awards committee, which is made up of the editors and publishers of Dance Magazine.
Although this year's honorees are from three different dance styles--Ann Reinking from jazz and theater dance, David Parsons from modern dance, and Ben Stevenson from ballet--they share, besides uncommon talent, a gift for creating and perpetuating dances of great popular appeal.
In this new millennium, it is clear that all spheres of arts and entertainment are competing for attention, in theaters as well as on air and online. Dance Magazine's honorees each have captured the imagination of a public hungry not just for entertainment, but for imagination, beauty, innovation, and enlightenment.
ANN REINKING
Time magazine once called Ann Reinking "Terpsiglorious," and maybe that says it all.
She was born in Washington State (one of seven children) but she studied in the summers with the San Francisco Ballet. She apprenticed with Robert Joffrey's Joffrey Ballet and moved to New York City where her first job was with the corps de ballet at Radio City Music Hall. After making the jump to Broadway, she was nominated for a Tony Award for her leading performance in Dancin', and was nominated for best actress in Goodtime Charley, which co-starred Joel Grey. Reinking is perhaps best known for her starring role in Bob Fosse's autobiographical movie All That Jazz.
Reinking, a sublime Broadway gypsy who indeed became a major presence in the life and work of Bob Fosse, recreated his Chicago in 1997, winning a Tony Award for choreography, the Drama Desk Award, the Outer Critics Circle Award, and the Astaire Award. Chicago is still running on Broadway, and almost next door, the musical revue Fosse continues to pack them in. This anthology of the choreographer's genius won Reinking--who co-directed with Richard Maltby Jr. and with artistic advice from 1961 Dance Magazine Award winner Gwen Verdon--another Tony credit when it captured Best Musical in 1999. Like Chicago, Fosse captivates with the style, the wit, the daring, the precision of Bob Fosse's creation as well as Ann Reinking's subtlety, dedication, and energy.
Reinking is also artistic director of the Broadway Theater Project in Tampa, Florida, an organization she founded that brings together young people and working theater professionals to build the next generation's artists in the distinctively American art form she epitomizes.
DAVID PARSONS
The world has one less recording engineer and one more choreographer--an exciting, inviting choreographer, at that--thanks to Paul Taylor. Seeing the Paul Taylor Dance Company at the Brooklyn Academy of Music made David Parsons--a Midwestern athlete turned New York City dance student turned dropout--decide to forsake his new vocation and give modern dance another shot. Parsons became a Taylor company understudy, supporting himself with a night job pumping gas. When a Taylor dancer fell ill before a tour of the Soviet Union, Parsons was in, and remained in from 1978 to 1987, performing some of Taylor's greatest works and creating roles in Arden Court, Last Look, and Roses.
Parsons began late-night choreographing at the 92nd Street Y's auditorium during this time, teaming up in 1987 with lighting designer Howell Binkley to form the Parsons Dance Company, and began building a repertory that today includes more than forty works. Parson's company mirrors his own physical beauty and derring-do (he once posed nearly nude atop the Chrysler Building); the dancers' exploits often take them airborne, a throwback, perhaps, to Parsons's childhood affinity for trampolining. The Parsons repertory spans human experience and expression, from the jokey angularity of The Letter to the seductive drowsiness of Sleep Study, to the mordant Ring Around the Rosey, his treatment of the plague years which inevitably evokes the tragedy of the AIDS epidemic. This range has made his work in demand with companies around the world, and his own troupe tours more than half the year.
An early work, his and Binkley's stroboscopic tour de force, Caught (1987), remains a classic of popular appeal. Parsons's recent project, directing the dance elements for Times Square 2000, the twenty-four-hour millennium celebration, was aimed at a global audience of billions. As an artistic director, Parsons artfully blends humanity and high tech.
BEN STEVENSON
Think of Ben Stevenson, an Englishman, as the new grand old man of American ballet, since he has now headed a company longer, it is believed, than any other current artistic director.
Stevenson has spent the past quarter-century leading the Houston Ballet, deep in the heart of Texas, and the results have been as outsized as Texas lore would demand. He's shaped a small regional company into an international contender, replete with strong, compelling dancers and an eclectic repertory that includes, most prominently, three full-length, uniquely-Ben-Stevenson ballets: The Snow Maiden, Dracula --part of a vampire-ballet boom as companies nationwide find that, to quote a Dance Magazine headline (October, 1999), "coffins can fill company coffers"-- and the brand-new Cleopatra (Dance Magazine, March, 2000). The company also boasts full-length Stevenson choreographies for Swan Lake, Romeo and Juliet, Cinderella, The Nutcracker, The Sleeping Beauty, Peer Gynt, Coppelia, and Don Quixote.
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