Weekend ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014 • PAGE B1 City Center festival gives dance new legs BY ALEXANDRA VILLARREAL Spectator Senior Staff Writer “I have an impression of New York’s identity ... and I’ve really tied it up in my head with that music,” Tim Harbour, the Australian Ballet’s resident choreographer, said. “What I love about it is that there’s this very mesmeric, serene quality, but there’s this tension that creeps into it almost imperceptibly.” When the Aussie traveled to Manhattan as a child, he slowly grew to recognize its intricacies—the pressure hidden behind glamor and spectacle. Now, he’s returning to the city with a new commission in tow for Fall for Dance, a multigenre dance festival at New York City Center from Oct. 8 to 19. Bill Evans’ “Peace Piece,” with its intrinsically New York jazz beat, inspired Harbour’s “Ostinato,” named for the repetitive chord progressions in its score. It begins with two men moving in unison but without uniformity of style. After all, principal dancers Daniel Gaudiello and Ty King-Wall definitely have their own aesthetic. “They’re very different people and very different personalities, so that informed the language that we developed,” Harbour said. They represent the ostinato phrase, and when soloist Robyn Hendricks enters from stage left, she becomes the improvised right hand of the piano accompaniment. “She’s really affecting these two men who begin with a sense of harmony and togetherness,” Harbour said. “She comes in as this extra element, and it forces each of them to get a new perspective on themselves.” It is rare for an artist to find reason within the abstract, and the hint of narrative in Harbour’s work is one of the many things that make him stand out in the world of contemporary ballet. Harbour also pays meticulous attention to detail. When he first began choreographing in his 30s, he was told to make sure that every step was recognizably his. Now, each swerve of hip and stretch of arm has his trademark on it. Of course, he’s been influenced by the greats—Jirí Kylián, George Balanchine, and others—but the snapshots in “Ostinato” are rooted in a vocabulary that distinguishes itself from its ancestors. “Second by second, every single moment had to feel SEE FALL FOR DANCE, page B2 This Weekend in $27.50 Inside… 1. Pacific Northwest Balley ($10, p. B4) 2. ‘St. Vincent’ ($8.75, p. B3) 3. ‘Gone Girl’ ($8.75, p. B3) ILLUSTRATION BY RACHAEL DOTTLE PAGE B2 Best of WEEKEND OCTOBER 9, 2014 SWEATERS Ah, fall. That magical time of year when the streets become rivers of pumpkin-spice-flavored beverages and apple cider doughnuts are plentiful. Along with the seasonal treats, the transition to fall has been accompanied by a nip in the air. As a result, you’ve likely donned your favorite sweater. This week, we’re taking a moment to appreciate the finer sweaters of pop culture, from authors to fictional characters. So curl up in your favorite cable-knit or turtleneck with a warm, pumpkin-y drink and follow me down this wooly rabbit hole. —DAVID SALAZAR Ernest Hemingway Bill Cosby Chances are, if you picture Ernest Hemingway in your mind’s eye (or like, do a Google image search), the most common image of him that doesn’t have a glass of whiskey in the frame is the one of him in an elaborate cable-knit turtleneck. After looking at this sweater, it’s tempting to amend his favorite quote to “Write drunk, edit sober, be cozy.” One of TV history’s best dads also had some of the best taste in cold-weather style. Whether it was random colorful shapes, a simple striped number, or even that one weird sweater with track runners on it, Dr. Clifford Huxtable was always wearing the most creative outfits while still managing to keep up with his kids and all their shenanigans. John Watson Mr. Rogers If I were friends with Sherlock Holmes and had to deal with his shit all the time, I probably wouldn’t have the energy necessary for the sartorial sensibility that John Watson possesses. While he’ll often opt for a simple cable-knit number, the most undeniably fashionable sweater he’s donned had its moment in the show’s best episode, “A Scandal in Belgravia.” Let’s just say his sweater, which enterprising tumblr users have identified as an Icelandic design from Reynolds, was as arresting as the interplay between Benedict Cumberbatch’s detective and Irene Adler. For many, Fred Rogers is synonymous with childhood. Also synonymous with Mr. Rogers is his collection of sweaters—which really means that your childhood is the same thing as a closet full of wool. His classic look is the red half-zip cardigan, which is so iconic that it’s in the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History. I would definitely be neighbors with someone whose sweater game was so on point. ILLUSTRATION BY TIFFANY FANG Wyatt Cenac on his new Netflix special BY CHARLES WOJCIK Spectator Staff Writer Veteran comedian Wyatt Cenac, widely known for his tenure on the late-night satirical television program “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,” spoke with Spectator about his upcoming comedy special, “Wyatt Cenac: Brooklyn,” which will be released on Netflix on Oct. 21. Charles Wojcik: Was the idea of the special thought up by you, or did someone approach you with the idea? Wyatt Cenac: It was my idea. I wanted to make another special. I’ve been thinking about doing one for a little while, and I was just sitting around and asking myself, “What’s stopping you?” I figured, “Oh, nothing is really stopping me, so let’s just do it,” and that’s how it came about. CW: How long did it take to get everything ready? Did you already have the material, or was that something else you had to plan out? WC: At that point I had a fair amount of material already written, and so that’s part of the reason why I felt ready to make another special. I’d already been putting some stuff together. I figured out that this is what I wanted to do. It just became about going through the material I had and figuring out what I would want to turn into an hour. ... I would say probably a year. CW: What I enjoyed most about your special is how personal it is. You included stories of relationship struggles, growing up, and your father’s death. Was there any hesitation with that sort of material? WC: You’re kind of putting yourself out there, and you know, there’s the hesitation that while I am able to be OK with it, will other people see it? Will they get it and be cool with it, or will they feel bad for me? Ultimately, you want people to laugh and you want them to feel something. The last thing you want is to have an audience come to a comedy show and then they wind up just feeling sorry for you. So there’s a little hesitation, but there’s also that kind of thrill of “Oh, can I take something personal, and make it relatable, and also make it amusing, and make it something that kind of touches people in a funny way?” CW: What would you say your message is with this special? What would you like the viewers to take away? WC: Hopefully, they take away laughter, but beyond that I don’t know. For me it was one that I kind of did on my own, as far as the production, and so I hope that for all of the DIY quality of it, they walk away and they appreciate it but also that they get a sense of what it’s like to see a show at Union Hall. Part of the reason I shot it there was because it’s a place I like performing, and it’s one of the first places that I did shows in Brooklyn. Those are the types of shows I like. I like them in a sort of cramped space where everyone’s kind of crowded together, and we’re all kind of close in on this thing. You see so many specials where it’s like a big theater and those are great, but for me, most of the time when I enjoy doing shows the most, it’s in those tight little spaces, and so I hope to give some sense of that to the viewer that maybe they see that and appreciate that side of going to see a comedy show. CW: It definitely seems very personal and intimate as well as being in Brooklyn, which makes it even more personal for you. WC: I feel stand-up is a personal thing, it is an intimate thing—you know, audiences are as much a part of the show as the performer. So to me, these are the places I enjoy doing comedy at, and that’s why I became interested in comedy. It was seeing comedians in those tiny little spaces that made me think, “That’s amazing, that’s really cool.” So hopefully there’s a little bit of coming back around to that idea of crawling into a weird basement to watch a person say things into a microphone and laugh. This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity. arts@columbiaspectator.com COURTESY OF ERIC MICHAEL PEARSON FUNNY MAN | Comedian Wyatt Cenac’s latest special will be released on Netflix Oct. 21. Fall for Dance puts old, new side by side FALL FOR DANCE from page B1 correct. So it became a bit of a puzzle of structure. I hope it comes across as a very fluid slide through the music,” Harbour said. On World Ballet Day last week, as Tchaikovsky’s “Swan Lake” anachronistically seeped into the Australian Ballet’s five-hour livestream video, Gaudiello, King-Wall, and Hendricks seemed content to be diverging from “The Nutcracker,” “Don Quixote,” and “La Bayadère” while they ran through “Ostinato.” After too many Sugar Plum Fairies and Solors, new repertoire came as a welcome change of pace. Harbour’s trio is only one of 11 New York, U.S., or world premieres at Fall for Dance. The showcase is a launchpad for innovation. This year, it’s celebrating 11 years since it was founded by CEO and President of City Center Arlene Shuler, GS ’77, Law ’78, in 2004. When Shuler first arrived at the theater that once hosted Balanchine’s Ballet Society, she was disappointed to discover its dwindling dance presence. As she thought back to a festival at the Delacorte Theater in the ’70s, she decided that she should have her own. She would invite companies that varied in approach, region, and recognition to collaborate for a series of performances at City Center as the leaves gilded over. To bring in a crowd, she priced all tickets at $15 so that everyone could have access to some of the most talented dancers of the 21st century. “The audiences in all of the arts are getting older, and we want young people to start early and keep going,” Shuler said. “You can’t perform to an empty theater, right? You have to have audiences.” Now, Fall for Dance has evolved into a string of talks, master classes, and shows. Over the next few days, 20 companies from 11 countries make up the bill. To give dance new legs, City Center has commissioned two new works by Pontus Lidberg and Mark Morris. Lidberg, a Swedish choreographer, has constructed a pas de deux for American Ballet Theatre principals Isabella Boylston and James Whiteside, while Morris is exploring Mendelssohn’s “Songs Without Words” with 16 of his own dancers from his New York-based group. While creation certainly runs through the festival’s veins, it also honors the classics. Frederick Ashton’s 1937 ballet, “Les Patineurs,” sits alongside the Lidberg debut, and newly established contemporary choreographers like Ohad Naharin of Israel and “Black Swan” star Benjamin Millepied will also be given their dues. Naharin’s “Minus 16,” a compilation of his most noteworthy oeuvre, spans a wide emotional spectrum, from dramatic and grandiose to intimate and delicate. Men in suits thrash in frustration. Then, a couple drops into the scene in a quiet portrait of fragility. Spearheading the vignettes is Alvin Ailey company member Samuel Lee Roberts. He executes a light improv section in Oharin’s Gaga language, which the choreographer devised to describe his movement. “It’s not one thematic thing. It’s sort of a journey,” Roberts said of “Minus 16.” “It’s this incredible audience participation piece, and I think that’s really important for Fall for Dance because it’s trying to get the audience into these companies and into dance itself.” Meanwhile, Les Ballets Jazz de Montréal is initiating its U.S. tour at Fall for Dance, where Céline Cassone and Alexander Hille will star in Millepied’s duet, “Closer.” Cassone served as Millepied’s muse for the piece in 2006, and it only makes sense that she replicate her role in the city next week. Millepied, the 37-year-old artistic director of the Paris Opera Ballet, has become a household name both inside and outside of the dance bubble. It may not be a coincidence that Shuler specifically requested “Closer” from BJM’s repertory. “Of course there’s a big buzz around him, and he deserves it because he has the talent,” BJM artistic director Louis Robitaille said of Millepied. Cassone’s original partner for “Closer” was Sébastien Marcovici of the New York City Ballet. When BJM adopted the pas de deux, Hille took his place upon the suggestion of Millepied, whom he met at Juilliard. The French choreographer knew that only two dancers with tremendous strength could manage the complicated patterns, lifts, and dives thrown into the exhaustive 18-minute ballet. “It’s a marriage between movement and music that is all with subtlety, grace, and good taste instead of big tricks,” Robitaille said. “It takes a lot of experience and maturity to be able to hypnotize the audience.” “There is nothing extraordinary like we see in ‘Swan Lake’ or ‘Don Quixote,’” Cassone added. “It’s something simpler, but because it’s simpler, this is where we find the challenge.” Joining BJM are other acclaimed companies from across the globe, like Black Grace, San Francisco Ballet, and Trisha Brown Dance Company. “I think that they do a really wonderful job of getting the gamut of what is available in not only New York City but in the world,” Roberts said. In his voice—and everyone else’s—is the familiar thrum of enthusiasm that pumps through New York City, the tension that creeps into Harbour’s mesmeric serenity. The curtain is about to rise, and friends are nervously whispering a final “merde” before they are blinded by stage lights. “We want people to fall in love with dance,” Shuler said. With the “jigsaw puzzle” of programs that she’s pieced together, Cupid’s arrows may just hit home. alexandra.villarreal@columbiaspectator.com OCTOBER 9, 2014 WEEKEND PAGE B3 Thom Yorke’s selfrelease out of touch I t’s no secret that Thom Yorke actively hates the music industry. After ditching his record label in 2007, he’s since accused Apple of trying to “destroy music” and Spotify of being the “last desperate fart DAVID of a dying corpse.” Perhaps it ECKER was naïve on my part, but I had really begun to think that there Slightly was nothing more Yorke could Off Key do to surprise me—that his musical misanthropy had reached some kind of bitter plateau. Then he released his new album through BitTorrent. Yes, that BitTorrent. The album, “Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes,” finds Yorke shunning literally every distribution channel available in favor of a platform that, until recently, was known primarily for its piracy. The irony is almost too good to ignore, but I’m going to try. Instead I’d like to focus on what I think are the critical flaws in his incredibly isolationist strategy. For one thing, it makes the album extremely inconvenient to purchase. BitTorrent has never sold an album before, which means that every purchaser will either need to sign up for PayPal or spend time filling out his or her name, email address, and credit card number. Why on earth would I give my information to yet another website just to make one $6 purchase? The album also can’t be downloaded on a mobile device. Sure, they’ll go ahead and take your money, but in order to actually get your music, you’ll have to put away your phone and pick up your laptop. The process is ill-conceived from start to finish, and it shows that Yorke and his ilk have literally no idea what kind of experience consumers actually want. COURTESY OF THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY ON HIS MURRAY WAY | Bill Murray stars in “St. Vincent,” a movie where he plays the curmudgeonly neighbor to single mom Maggie (Melissa McCarthy). Director Theodore Melfi talks about ‘St. Vincent’ and Bill Murray BY COCO DOWLING Spectator Staff Writer At first glance, “St. Vincent” may seem like your regular Hollywood movie. With its star-studded supporting cast, including Melissa McCarthy as single mother Maggie and Naomi Watts as pregnant stripper Daka, the film—and the many steps taken to realize the script—focuses on Bill Murray. In his first foray into feature film, screenwriter-director Theodore Melfi jumped through many hoops to grab Murray’s attention. In a now-viral struggle to cast Murray, Melfi had to try many antiquated means of contact because Murray does not have a manager, agent, or publicist. Melfi left “message after message” on the mailbox of a 1-800 number slipped to him by a mutual friend, producer Fred Roos. Finally, Murray’s personal lawyer called and asked him to send a one-page letter about himself and his proposal to a P.O. box in upstate New York. After two weeks, Murray’s lawyer called again, this time requesting that the entire script be sent to a P.O. box in Martha’s Vineyard. Another two weeks passed before a third call requested that the script be sent to a P.O. box in South Carolina. Finally, a couple weeks later, Murray requested Melfi meet him in two days in Cannes, which was impossible for Melfi’s schedule. After an agonizing three weeks, Murray called Melfi again, this time requesting a meeting in one hour at LAX. After meeting at the airport, the two headed to InN-Out Burger to review the script. Murray had few notes on the story, which follows Vincent, a curmudgeonly war veteran who agrees to look after his next-door neighbor Maggie’s son, Oliver, for $11 an hour. “He [Murray] had probably 20 different places in the script where he had a little check mark. He said, ‘Listen. You write with backhand and I write and act with forehand,’” Melfi said, adding that Murray suggested edits to the script. “I went home and ... I thought, ‘This guy is fucking crazy.’ It took me maybe an hour to rewrite the entire script for Bill Murray, because that’s all he was asking for. And sure enough, I go, ‘That motherfucker.’ Because he was 100 percent right. It made the script ... more alive. And I can’t even explain how it did it.” “I was trying to test the theory that you could watch Bill Murray read the phone book. People watch that and they don’t move. It’s the magic of Bill Murray.” —Theodore Melfi, “St. Vincent” director Though Jack Nicholson was approached for the role of Vincent before Murray, Melfi said that the role is really meant for Murray. “I didn’t really want Jack Nicholson. It was more of a studio thing, like, ‘Who’s the biggest star in the world?’ kind of bullshit,” he said. “I’ll tell you what Bill Murray brings to the film. He has such a pathos about him—such depth in his heart and his eyes and his soul. Not one actor or human on the planet has this.” Though the cast and crew worked long hours during filming, the experience was interspersed with much cause to celebrate. “We had lots of parties,” Melfi said. “It seemed like we had a party every week, or every other week. Bill said, ‘Oh, we’re about halfway through the movie. We should have an over-the-hill party,’ so we had an over-the-hill party, and the party started at wrap, which was at midnight. It’s been very enjoyable getting to know these people because they’re all great humans.” Melfi said that the slower pacing of his movie is aimed at allowing the audience to appreciate the film’s honesty. “Over the past 20 years of cinema, we’ve created an impatience in the audience,” Melfi said. “At times, you’re missing out on a lot because you don’t get to slow down and enjoy a human moment, which takes time. I think we’ve gotten inundated with movies that are fast-paced to the point where we don’t even know what slowing down means anymore.” An example of the slower pacing is a clip of the movie posted on YouTube that is used during the end credits. In it, Murray smokes a cigarette on a bench and sings along to the entirety of Bob Dylan’s “Shelter from the Storm.” “I was trying to test the theory that you could watch Bill Murray read the phone book,” Melfi said. “People watch that and they don’t move. It’s the magic of Bill Murray.” Though the title may suggest otherwise, the film is not spiritual or religious in nature, but a more broad shared condition. “I was trying to say something more about humans, and basically what I was trying to say is that we all have value,” Melfi said. “Over time, that value gets chipped away until we feel like we have no value, and then you end up ... with a social security check and a small little ranch house and not that much else to show for it, and you go, ‘What the fuck have I done?’ ... Just think of the Vins in your life and have a sense of compassion for other people, because we’re all on this damn planet together.” “St Vincent” will open in Manhattan on Oct. 10. arts@columbiaspectator.com History speaks for itself—we want our music to be easily accessible, and we don’t want to waste our valuable time trying to locate it. It has become almost cliché to say that our media is hyper-fragmented. This is true, of course, when it comes to the sheer range and availability of niche media, but it’s far less true when it comes to our consumption habits. Chances are, if you want to beef up your obscure knowledge, you’ll rely on Wikipedia. Likewise, if you want to keep tabs on (read: stalk) certain acquaintances, you’ll probably check out their Facebooks and Instagrams rather than sifting through endless Google results. Our actions suggest that we tend to prefer cohesive and unified experiences to a jumbled mess of hits and misses. Nowhere is this truer than in the music industry. Over the past 100 years, we’ve seen phonographs give way to the radio and CDs give way to the iPod. We’ve seen tape decks combine with CD players and CD players combine with turntables. Hell, even Sirius and XM decided they were better together than apart. History speaks for itself—we want our music to be easily accessible, and we don’t want to waste our valuable time trying to locate it. When a musician completely ignores this reality, he might as well be ignoring his fans. It’s possible that Thom Yorke will gain enough publicity to successfully pull off his latest stunt, but I sincerely worry about the next guy (or gal) who tries it. When it comes to music distribution, there really is a power in numbers, and if you try to shut yourself off from that world, you just might get more isolation than you bargained for. David Ecker is a Columbia College senior majoring in history. Slightly Off Key runs alternate Thursdays. ‘Gone Girl,’ ‘Inherent Vice’ offer examples of the pitfalls and potential of narration in film N arration in films usually annoys me. Most of the time it spells out everything I’m already watching, as if the filmmaker thinks I’m some kind of moron. Or they’ll ALEX lazily cram in a bunch of exDANIELS position that they didn’t want to take the time to figure out Pull with any visual efficiency. It Focus tends to feel removed, musing, uninvolved. It can be a crutch for bad writing. It took Kubrick’s films for me to realize that it doesn’t have to be. Narration can add a level of irony, unreliability, or surreality to what’s happening on screen. There’s a lot of potential, and it’s up to a good storyteller to figure out when it’s appropriate to use. This weekend, I saw two new films from two great filmmakers, each of which prominently featured narration: “Gone Girl” and “Inherent Vice.” And although it was effective in each picture, I felt very differently about each filmmaker’s decisions on how to use it. In “Gone Girl,” hearing the voices of both main characters shifts our perspective on the story. It’s textbook unreliable narration. We start out unsure of what happened to the wife of Nick (Ben Affleck) and feeling that perhaps he’s holding something back. When we switch to the voice of his wife Amy (Rosamund Pike) in the form of journal entries, we’re first sympathetic, but then come across a number of red flags. This is meant to build intrigue, to create a cat-and-mouse dynamic with the audience. The problem, however, is that we never invest in the characters enough for their lies to carry any weight. Their backstory feels inauthentic, as if their memories came from a writer’s personality rather than their own. They are neither unique nor three-dimensional. Both actors give a wooden, monotonous, “I’m going to speak in a sleek, modern, disinterested voice” delivery. Because little effort is put into crafting sympathetic characters, the narration becomes a cheap gimmick. More troubling, however, is that the most captivating, efficiently told moments of this meandering film are driven by narration and montage. Now, I have not read Gillian Flynn’s novel on which the film was based, so I’ll give it the benefit of the doubt and say that this was poor execution on director David Fincher’s part. He seemed to only be worried about directing the camera. Paul Thomas Anderson, on the other hand, has a whole other magnitude of author to work with in adapting Thomas Pynchon’s “Inherent Vice.” Pynchon has never been adapted to film before now, so it was up to Anderson, who also wrote the film’s screenplay, to figure out how to keep us invested in the moment without getting rid of Pynchon’s poignant yet sardonic prose. It helps that the story has vague noir roots, where narration is a staple. But rather than the voice of P.I. “Doc” Sportello (Joaquin Phoenix), we are treated to lilting, expressive narration from a side character, played by Joanna Newsom, who is hardly in the film. The integrity of Pynchon’s inventive prose remains intact, and the choice of using this specific character amplifies its ability to draw us in. She sounds like a flower child: introspective, compassionate, and playful, fitting for the ’70s setting. The best thing about her narration, though, is that it blatantly enters in and out of Doc’s own stream of consciousness. These jarring moments deliberately point out that we are being narrated to, making the narration more meta than manipulative. There’s also a hazy passing mention of Doc’s psychic abilities, which suggests a mutable connection between these two disparate characters. There can be no final word on the use of narration, so I don’t wish to attempt to offer one. As a discerning viewer, however, I can recognize when it’s used more effectively. And I can say that it helps to start out with A) a great writer, and B) a good reason. After all, the need for narration isn’t inherent in every story. Alex Daniels is a General Studies student majoring in classics and a filmmaker. Pull Focus runs alternate Thursdays. WEEKEND PAGE B4 OCTOBER 9, 2014 Flipside Guide WHERE IT’S AT Place: 93 Wythe Ave., Brooklyn Cost: $ Rating: »»» DAISY CHENG FOR SPECTATOR MATCHA MAKER | Williamsburg’s latest addition is MatchaBar, which deals in powdered green tea, incorporating it into cake, cupcakes, and hot and cold beverages. It also sells the antioxidant-rich beverage in bulk at its storefront just off the L train. MatchaBar Cakes, hot and cold drinks among Williamsburg tea bar’s offerings BY DAISY CHENG Columbia Daily Spectator WHERE IT’S AT Time: Through Oct. 12 Place: Joyce Theater, 174 Eighth Ave. Cost: From $10 Rating: »»« COURTESY OF ANGELA STERLING TIDAL MOVEMENT | The Pacific Northwest Ballet’s current tour at the Joyce Theater falls flat despite its skill and material. Pacific Northwest Ballet Skilled dancers, choreographers aren’t enough to elevate Joyce stint As far as superfoods go, matcha seems to be at the top of its game at Williamsburg’s MatchaBar. Founded by brothers Max and Graham Fortgang, MatchaBar was created not just to sell matcha drinks and desserts, but to create awareness for the immense health benefits matcha has to offer. A powdered green tea, matcha’s health benefits and versatility have made it one of today’s fastest-growing food trends. Two grams of matcha contain the same amount of caffeine as a cup of coffee—but it contains about 10 times as many antioxidants. Moreover, it contains an amino acid that produces a calming effect, making you feel alert (from the caffeine) and calm at the same time. Just a short walk from the L train stop at Bedford Avenue, MatchaBar’s small space boasts a clean-cut, simple interior. Its menu, like its design, is minimalist but comprehensive, comprised mostly of matcha-related drinks. MatchaBar’s versatility is impressive—it sells matcha fruit juice drinks, matcha coffees, matcha teas, and some matcha desserts. One of its most popular beverages is the cinnamon hemp matcha. This innovative combination is a twist on the typical matcha green tea— the rich matcha has a slightly nutty taste, sweetened by the cinnamon. With no added sweetener, the drink was very refreshing and light—a healthy option, for sure. I tried it hot, but it’s available hot and cold. I also tried the vanilla almond matcha, which is made with almond milk and a hint of vanilla. Similar to the cinnamon hemp matcha, this drink retains its distinct matcha flavor, but this time with a vanilla undertone. As a cold drink, however, the flavor wasn’t as strong as in the warm drink. Of course, the café wouldn’t be a café without desserts. MatchaBar has some of its own matcha sweets to go along with its drinks. I ordered a small matcha bundt cake and a matcha cupcake. While both desserts had matcha elements—the cake had the powder over it and the cupcake had matcha frosting—its flavor was not as strong as it was in the drinks. The cake’s matcha powder added little to the original taste of the sweet, spongy cake, and the dominant flavor of the cupcake was chocolate. Nonetheless, the desserts were a nice complement to the drinks. If you want more matcha, MatchaBar has its product directly sourced from a family farm in Nishio, Japan, and they sell various sizes of two grades of the tea powder. MatchaBar’s innovative offerings will undoubtedly make it a haven for health-conscious Brooklynites. While matcha may be a bit of an acquired taste, its relatively light flavors make for a refreshing break from the heaviness of coffee. arts@columbiaspectator.com BY ALEXANDRA VILLARREAL Spectator Senior Staff Writer Blues, tans, grays—costume colors evoke the same removed tranquility as conveyed in the Pacific Northwest Ballet’s program at the Joyce Theater. PNB is known for its long, languid lines and juxtaposing, sharp technique. When the dancers perform William Forsythe’s “In the Middle, Somewhat Elevated,” they are in their element. Thanks to Maurice Sendak’s fantastical influence, their “Nutcracker” gives Clara and her toy a new bent. The company is constantly pushing boundaries and imbuing classicality with edge. For the troupe’s Joyce tour from Oct. 8 to 12, it has partnered with some of the world’s leading choreographers, so it’s surprising that the show comes off cold. Fronting the bill is Christopher Wheeldon’s “Tide Harmonic,” which debuted in May 2013 for PNB’s 40th anniversary season. Wheeldon is a genius. He has a way of navigating bodies so they seem an extension of the soul. His “After the Rain” and the 2013 9/11 New York City Ballet film tribute it inspired are both viscerally intoxicating. One cannot watch “This Bitter Earth” with apathy. “Tide Harmonic” would be a valiant effort for any other choreographer, but given Wheeldon’s talent, it falls short. It’s stuck and fidgety. For a piece about water, the motions lack fluidity. Gliding, sliding, and skidding are common, but so are flexed feet and purposefully distorted positions. The dancers are lovely, of course, but even they cannot make any of it mean something. Perhaps that is the point. It could be that for once, Wheeldon doesn’t want to take his audience on an emotional rollercoaster. What a shame. Its successor is better. Some say that choreographer Alejandro Cerrudo is a Kylián copycat, but at least his repertoire has electricity. “Memory Glow” is a provocative ode to Cerrudo’s love, Ana, and its duets attest to the messy intricacies of any substantive relationship. Leah Merchant melts into her partner’s arms with a sense of honest exhaustion. Elizabeth Murphy stretches her fingertips into the beyond, her vulnerability on display. Meanwhile, the male corps exudes poised masculinity and grace. Even if “Memory Glow” does replicate the greats, at least it’s stunning, riveting, and irresistibly immediate. Finally, Justin Peck’s new piece offers insight into his development as a choreographer. The Columbia Ballet Collaborative introduced him to the choreographic scene with “A Teacup Plunge” in 2009. Now, he’s the resident choreographer for New York City Ballet, and he’s getting commissions left and right. Though “Debonair” will officially premiere this November in Seattle, New York audiences are getting a preview now, and it’s spectacular. His leading lady is PNB principal Carla Körbes, who set dance media ablaze when she announced her premature retirement in June of next year. Peck may be the Balanchine of the 21st century—he manipulates his ancestor’s vernacular with ease, but he also gives it an update. Like Balanchine, he’s thrown a few playful plots into an otherwise abstract ensemble, where couples flirtatiously waltz across the marley. But unlike Balanchine, Peck’s dancers are men and women, not boys and girls. Yes, “Debonair” has an ephemeral, sparkling quality, but it doesn’t quite reach transcendence because of the venue. Peck’s skill lies in his effective use of space—circularity and expansiveness are two of his trademarks. Unfortunately, the Joyce can’t support the magnitude of his movement. One can only hope that Seattle’s McCaw Hall will be more accommodating. PNB’s dancers are some of the best in the country. Unfortunately, their stint at the Joyce lacks their usual vitality and passion, but it’s still beautiful ballet. In a world where tricks are the new artistry, that’s saying something. The Pacific Northwest Ballet performs at the Joyce Theater, 175 Eighth Ave., through Oct. 12. Tickets start at $10. alexandra.villarreal@columbiaspectator.com WHERE IT’S AT Time: Through Nov. 8 Place: Metropolitan Opera Cost: From $25 Rating: »»» COURTESY OF MARTY SOHL DO YOU BELIEVE IN MAGIC | Markus Werba, left, and Pretty Yende star as Papageno and Pamina in the Metropolitan Opera’s production of Mozart’s “The Magic Flute.” The production is directd by Julie Taymor. ‘The Magic Flute’ The Met presents Julie Taymor’s production of ‘Die Zauberflöte,’ Mozart’s ‘convoluted fairy tale’ BY CHRIS BROWNER Spectator Opera Critic What do the Beatles, the Walt Disney Company, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart have in common? Works of theirs have all been staged by visionary director Julie Taymor. For the Beatles, it was “Across the Universe,” and for Disney, it was “The Lion King.” In the case of Mozart, Taymor directed a production of his final opera, “Die Zauberflöte” (“The Magic Flute”), for the Metropolitan Opera in 2004, and it was this staging that the Met presented on Oct. 6. However, even the spectacle of this dazzling production could not fully compensate for the lackluster cast assembled for Monday night’s performance. The opera itself is something of a convoluted fairy tale depicting the exploits of a mysterious prince, Tamino, and his bird-catcher companion, Papageno. What begins as a rescue mission to save the princess Pamina from an evil sorcerer, Sarastro, turns into a quest for love and enlightenment as the pair eventually undergoes trials to join Sarastro’s brotherhood. Despite some outdated ideas about men and women—the 1791 opera has moments of outlandish misogyny—and an abstruse plot, the work has endured due to a wealth of beloved melodies. Taymor’s production takes the whimsy of the piece and runs with it, bringing the audience along on a surreally spellbinding exploration. Colorful puppets, masks, dancers, and stilt walkers cavort within a set of translucent walls, vivid lighting, and abstract symbols. The production is inventive throughout, and Taymor’s wealth of clever ideas never seems to wane. Another source of excitement bursts from the orchestra pit as Adam Fischer leads a lively reading of Mozart’s score. From the overture’s opening allegro, he chooses surprisingly zippy tempos for much of the evening, and though the pacing seemed rushed at times, the overall energy of his conducting was palpable. Furthermore, Maestro Fischer drew a remarkable variety of colors out of his players, offering the audience a raw yet vital account of this masterpiece of the repertory. Toby Spence is an underwhelming Tamino, and his stiff persona does little to portray his character’s nobility. The tenor’s tone is pleasant enough, showing only slight signs of strain in the upper register, but his bland approach brings little of interest. South African soprano Pretty Yende, who made quite an impression with a last minute Met debut in 2013, brings a bright tone and careful finesse to the role of Pamina, the young princess in distress. As the evening’s comic relief, Markus Werba is a wily and lovable Papageno. Complementing his robust baritone with committed physicality and deft timing, Werba makes much of this endearing sidekick role, and his sweetheart Papagena is sung charmingly by Ashley Emerson. Ana Durlovski offered a vocally inconsistent debut as the Queen of the Night, Pamina’s maniacal mother. While Durlovski shows impressive agility and shimmering clarity in the upper reaches of her instrument, this brilliance contrasts noticeably with muddy singing in the middle and lower ranges. Stalwart bass René Pape brings an authoritative presence to Sarastro, the opera’s benevolent moral compass. Pape’s performance is certainly the most refined of the night, as he displays a complete command of his role with a sonorous tone. Mark Schowalter is a comically sinister Monostatos, and the Metropolitan Opera Chorus renders the opera’s magical choral music beautifully. As was the case with the Met’s presentation of Mozart’s “Le nozze di Figaro” earlier this season, it is the composer’s creativity that ultimately succeeds in enthralling the audience despite a mediocre performance. The vocals in “The Magic Flute” aren’t wholly unappealing—they simply do not meet the highest standards of great Met performances. In the end, Taymor’s mesmerizing production and Mozart’s genius for melody still make the opera worth attending. Performances of Mozart’s “The Magic Flute” run through Nov. 8, and tickets start at just $25. More information can be found online at www. metoperafamily.org. arts@columbiaspectator.com
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