Modern dance
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Joyce Scherer
If anyone can explain how dance has changed in 100 years, it is award-winning dancer/choreographer Loretta Livingston.
However, her illuminations won’t be found in the written word, but
rather interpreted through a rich and innovative dance production aptly
called “Two Thousand Steps.”
“I was very fortunate, as an artist, to be given this commission. It
is a rare and wonderful opportunity to be supported while creating such
an exciting work,” said the Los Angeles resident, who was asked by the
Orange County Performing Arts Center to create the full-length “Two
Thousand Steps,” slated to premier Friday in Segestrom Hall. The
production is part of the center’s Imagination Celebration of Orange
County, co-presented with the Department of Education of Orange County.
Livingston’s original dance work will be structured into two versions:
one longer production with an intermission for a full evening’s program;
and a shorter, one-act adaptation suitable for younger audiences, said
Troy Botello, the center’s director of education.
“The full-length production will be performed at the premiere and be
used in possible touring or by other companies wishing to present the
work,” Botello said.
Livingston, a fifth-generation Californian, honed her skills under the
mentorship of dance legend Bella Lewitzky. She toured the United States
and Europe with the Lewitzky Dance Co. and became a soloist, a principal
and eventually took on some of Lewitzky’s original roles.
In 1984 she formed her own dance ensemble, Loretta Livingston &
Dancers, and went on to create and produce a series of evening-length
dance works that earned her 10 prestigious Lester Horton Dance Awards.
Equally gifted with creating works for children, Livingston’s produced
the award-winning family production “The Grandma Moses Project,” a show
based on the paintings of American folk painter Anna Mary Robertson
Moses.
“Two Thousand Steps,” which has an original score, is packed with
imaginative steps, props, costumes and lighting.
Livingston’s goal is to help the audience understand how concert --
also known as modern dance -- is different from a classical ballet
experience.
“Concert or modern dance is a life painting, so to speak,” she said.
“Our lives are serendipitous adventures rather than a simple, linear
narrative story. Many things can happen at once and this is a very modern
sensibility. We also understand the need to find our own voice, and this
is modern, too.”
To accomplish this, Livingston has chosen several key ideas that were
revolutionary in 20th-century dance and used them to convey how dance has
changed in the last 100 years.
She said the eight dancers in the production were selected for their
individuality, uniqueness and superior dancing ability. Varied in their
training, the dancers are skilled in other disciplines such as
gymnastics, yoga, voice, acting and visual arts.
“They are a beautiful reflection of multiple heritage and eclectic
training,” she said. “I believe these dancers have the special appeal
which will captivate and carry mixed-age audiences through the
progression of ‘Two Thousand Steps.”’
WHAT: “Two Thousand Steps,” by dancer/choreographer Loretta Livingston
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center’s Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa
WHEN: 8 p.m. Friday
HOW MUCH: $8
PHONE: (714) 556-ARTS, Ext. 6071 or (714) 740-7878
WEB SITE: www.ocpac.com
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