A tribute to dance--and a teacher
Claudia Figueroa
Angelika Nemeth wants to share the meaning of Middle Eastern dance with
the world.
And judging from the national acclaim Nemeth and her dancers have won for
their interpretive studies of the dance form in recent years, she’s off
to a good start.
Nemeth, who is on Orange Coast College’s dance faculty, oversees several
independent productions a year at the college.
Nemeth, however, says tonight’s show is different from her other
productions.
“Celebration of Middle Eastern Dance” is a tribute to the late master
teacher and award-winning choreographer Ibrahim Farrah, who died in 1998.
Farrah, who was born in Pennsylvania to Lebanese immigrants, is mostly
known for traveling around the nation to teach the meaning of Middle
Eastern dance and culture.
Nemeth, who serves as the show’s West Coast producer, studied with Farrah
in the 1970s and was one of his first pupils. Nemeth said she maintained
a long-distance friendship with him until his death.
“Meeting him was an epiphany for me,” said Nemeth, who studied many
Middle Eastern dance disciplines with Farrah during their 20-year
pupil/teacher relationship.
“Learning a deep understanding of Middle Eastern culture was what made
learning the dance style so interesting and fun,” she said.
Nemeth said Middle Eastern dance is still very much the inspirational
experience it was when she first began her studies.
Over the years, however, she discovered that not everybody viewed her
dance the way she wanted them to.
Nemeth said because of its sensuality and exotic body movements, Middle
Eastern dance has been misconstrued more than it has been accepted as an
art form, like ballet.
The dance style “got a dubious reputation and because of that it wasn’t
looked at as an art form, but more of just a dance of seduction,” she
said. “Audiences in the Western world didn’t take it seriously because it
was taken out of its cultural context, and people not familiar with the
dance form didn’t view the dance as being part of the music, they just
saw the passion and gestures that go with the dance.”
Farrah’s work attempted to change that, Nemeth said.
“His contribution to Middle Eastern dance was to raise the consciousness
and knowledge to both the people who were part of Middle Eastern culture
and knew very little about their heritage and to those who wanted to
broaden themselves,” she said.
Nemeth said her goal is to use the proceeds from her shows to archive
Farrah’s work in the dance library at New York’s Lincoln Center.
Nemeth said tonight’s performance will be a personal one, because all the
people involved in the show were very close to the late dance guru.
Joining Nemeth on stage will be Dahlena, Gahtiem, Carman Evans, Tina
O’Neil, Morwenna and Waslid Assaf, Raks el Anwar, Jajouka, Samara,
percussionist Hanna Mirhage and guest artist Ghazal.
Morwenna Assaf, who will perform with her husband, studied with Farrah in
New York for several years before moving to Oceanside and opening a dance
academy, where she’s teaching Farrah’s method.
“He was a choreographical genius because he mastered the movements and
knew the culture inside and out,” she said. “His movements were clean and
precise and never-ending. He was amazing.”
Nemeth said the production also is meant to be a portrait of all Middle
Eastern dance styles. The two-hour show will include a modern
interpretive performance by Nemeth to Persian music. The dancers will
treat the audience to a potpourri of traditional dances from Greece,
Lebanon and Turkey.
Nemeth said the program will feature elements of folkloric and cabaret
styles as well.
The Ibrahim Farrah Near East Dance Group from New York City will take a
break from its national tour to perform a special tribute to Farrah
during the program’s second half.
WHAT: Celebration of Middle Eastern Dance at 8 p.m. today
WHERE: Robert B. Moore Theatre, Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
HOW MUCH: $24 in advance, $32 at the door
PHONE: (714) 432-5880
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