As so often happens with dance in Taiwan, fans suffer through periods of feast and famine, though luckily the former is usually the problem. Contemporary dance fans have an even tougher choice this weekend with performances by two legends — but at either end of the country.
French ballerina-turned-modern dancer Sylvie Guillem has brought her show, 6000 Miles Away, to Taipei for two performances at the National Theater, while Greater Kaohsiung is playing host to the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, which is performing Jones’ latest work, Story/Time at the Chihteh Hall in the Kaohsiung Cultural Center tonight and tomorrow afternoon.
Dance lovers in southern Taiwan owe a huge debt of gratitude to the programmers of the annual Kaohsiung Spring Arts Festival (高雄春天藝術節) for managing to arrange an appearance by Jones’ company, only the second time it has visited Taiwan.
Credit: Courtesy of Paul B Goode
The troupe’s first trip was almost seven years ago, in September 2007, when it performed Jones’ Blind Date at the National Theater in Taipei.
Of great interest to the local media at that time was Taiwanese dancer Lin Wen-chung (林文中), who had been with the company for seven years and was in his final weeks with Jones, having decided to move back home to strike out on his own.
This time around, another dancer is happy to be returning to Taiwan to show family and friends what she has been doing in New York City. Taipei National University of the Arts dance program-graduate Liu I-ying (劉奕伶) has performed with several local troupes, including Ku and Dancers (古名伸舞蹈團) and the Neo-Classic Dance Company (新古典舞團). She joined Jones’ group the year after Lin left, in 2008, although she had served as an apprentice the previous year.
Credit: Courtesy of Paul B Goode
The Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company is now in its 31st year, and luckily the 62-year-old Jones shows no signs of slowing down. In addition to being a dancer and prize/fellowship-winning choreographer, Jones is a writer and a theater director, having co-written and directed the Tony-award winning musical Fela about Nigerian composer and activist Fela Anikulapo Kuti, which premiered on Broadway in 2009.
Early on in his works he began incorporating both text and video, breaking down the walls between a purely “dance” piece and theater. Text plays a key role in Story/Time, which premiered in 2012.
Story/Time was inspired by avant-garde US composer John Cage, whose professional life became inextricably linked with another modern dance great, Merce Cunningham. Cage released an album in 1958 called Indeterminancy, in which he read a series of short stories as David Tudor improvised musical passages on a piano in another room. The trick was that neither man could hear what the other was doing. Cage also performed the piece on stage.
Jones took that idea of mixing narrative with another art form, yet not deliberately connecting them. He wrote about 170 largely autobiographical stories, each a minute or so long. For each show, he chooses 70 of the stories to tell, reading them out in his beautiful, melodious voice while seated behind a simple desk — behind a row of eight green apples — as his dancers perform snippets of choreography that he either created fresh for this piece or assembled from past works along with his long-time associate artistic director Janet Wong.
Like Indeterminancy, the confluence of stories and dances in Story/Times is a matter of chance, not design, but the show is no less spellbinding for it.
It is hard to begrudge the Kaohsiung festival for managing to snare Jones’ and company, given that Taipei usually scores all the big-name performances, but I hope Taipei-area fans do not have to wait another seven years to see the troupe again.
This story has been corrected since it was first published to amend the photographer's credit.
The year was 1991. A Toyota Land Cruiser set out on a 67km journey up the Junda Forest Road (郡大林道) toward an old loggers’ camp, at which point the hikers inside would get out and begin their ascent of Jade Mountain (玉山). Little did they know, they would be the last group of hikers to ever enjoy this shortcut into the mountains. An approaching typhoon soon wiped out the road behind them, trapping the vehicle on the mountain and forever changing the approach to Jade Mountain. THE CONTEMPORARY ROUTE Nowadays, the approach to Jade Mountain from the north side takes an
Last week Joseph Nye, the well-known China scholar, wrote on the Australian Strategic Policy Institute’s website about how war over Taiwan might be averted. He noted that years ago he was on a team that met with then-president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁), “whose previous ‘unofficial’ visit to the US had caused a crisis in which China fired missiles into the sea and the US deployed carriers off the coast of Taiwan.” Yes, that’s right, mighty Chen caused that crisis all by himself. Neither the US nor the People’s Republic of China (PRC) exercised any agency. Nye then nostalgically invoked the comical specter
Relations between Taiwan and the Czech Republic have flourished in recent years. However, not everyone is pleased about the growing friendship between the two countries. Last month, an incident involving a Chinese diplomat tailing the car of vice president-elect Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴) in Prague, drew public attention to the People’s Republic of China’s (PRC) operations to undermine Taiwan overseas. The trip was not Hsiao’s first visit to the Central European country. It was meant to be low-key, a chance to meet with local academics and politicians, until her police escort noticed a car was tailing her through the Czech capital. The
April 15 to April 21 Yang Kui (楊逵) was horrified as he drove past trucks, oxcarts and trolleys loaded with coffins on his way to Tuntzechiao (屯子腳), which he heard had been completely destroyed. The friend he came to check on was safe, but most residents were suffering in the town hit the hardest by the 7.1-magnitude Hsinchu-Taichung Earthquake on April 21, 1935. It remains the deadliest in Taiwan’s recorded history, claiming around 3,300 lives and injuring nearly 12,000. The disaster completely flattened roughly 18,000 houses and damaged countless more. The social activist and