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Seattle Ice Theater
Paramount Theater, October 15-17
BUT IF ICE DANCING isn't dancing, it isn't traditional ice skating, either. It is supposed to be more responsive to music, less strictly athletic and independent of tricks. In the past it's struggled to define exactly what those requirements mean, and judging by the performances of Seattle Ice Theater, that process isn't complete yet.
In two group works, former ice dance champion turned coach/choreographer Bernard Ford makes good use of what skating does well, moving an otherwise static shape through space and contrasting short, sharp, repetitive action with long swoops and glides. His "Hands On" owes a great deal to Bob Fosse's trademark style, but in "Blue Bolero" he isn't quite able to keep away from the more gimmicky parts of the skating world, costuming his performers in glowsticks and bathing them in black light. His duet to the "Bell Song" from Lakme and professional competitor Rory Burghart's choreography for herself to George Gershwin's "Summertime" both fall into the skating convention of ignoring the underlying rhythmic structure of the score to accommodate the demands of spinning and jumping.
"Forest," choreographed by the group's artistic director Rebecca Safai to a piano score by John Adams, was overlong, with group after group of skaters traveling around the stage distinguished only by their costumes. With the exception of some prop branches and some twiggy bits stuck in one woman's headdress, it was hard to find much arboreal about it. Another of Safai's works on the program, "Passage," suffered from its overwrought scenario in which a tattooed, shirtless man struggles to break free from some unarticulated threat. He is aided by Sky Cries Mary and a benevolent woman in a silver unitard and a headdress that looked like a model of planetary orbits—the chains around his wrists were the last, literal nail in the coffin.
Although many of the themes in these works were heavy-handed at best and the costumes often too full of sequins and glitter, the choreographical gut-work— the bodies moving through space—was surprisingly clean. Take away the clutter, and there's the potential for some glorious exploration of pattern and form, and an expressivity that reaches beyond the tricks toward transcendence.