logo
#

Latest news with #Slacktide

Afternoon Briefing: Illinois House fail to pass convicted youth resentencing bill
Afternoon Briefing: Illinois House fail to pass convicted youth resentencing bill

Yahoo

time11-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Afternoon Briefing: Illinois House fail to pass convicted youth resentencing bill

Good afternoon, Chicago. In a surprising loss for criminal justice reform advocates, Democrats were unable to pass legislation providing more resentencing options for people in prison convicted of committing crimes when they were under 21. The bill not only was a setback for advocates but also underscored a political divide between progressives and moderates within the Democratic Party, which has a supermajority in the House. The measure sponsored by Chicago Democratic state Rep. Theresa Mah was defeated late yesterday 51-49 — 11 votes short of passage as several Democrats, including from the suburbs and downstate, either voted against the bill or did not vote at all. Here's what else is happening today. And remember, for the latest breaking news in Chicago, visit and sign up to get our alerts on all your devices. Subscribe to more newsletters | Asking Eric | Horoscopes | Puzzles & Games | Today in History The meeting followed the announcement by American First Legal, a conservative nonprofit, that it had filed a complaint with the criminal section of the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division urging it to investigate District 109 and its administrators over an alleged incident of female students at Shepard Middle School being forced by staffers to change in front of a transgender girl, an allegation the district has denied. Read more here. More top news stories: City Council blocks $1.25 million settlement for Dexter Reed's family 'I've been nothing but transparent': Former UIC student speaks out after his visa was revoked The trial breakfast menu — which will be available daily at five Chicago-area restaurants starting April 15 — comes as the homegrown chain has struggled at times to find its footing amid ambitious national expansion plans. Read more here. More top business stories: Commercial real estate executive was the buyer in Chicago's highest-priced single-family sale last year Troubled Vista Medical Center East in Waukegan hires new CEO from within Offseason moves have led GM Ryan Poles to feel like the Chicago Bears can lean toward the best player available in the 2025 NFL draft. Read more here. More top sports stories: A Chicago Bulls hat triggered a man's deportation — and profiling of such apparel and tattoos could be on the rise Chicago Cubs acquire reliever Tom Cosgrove in trade and send him to Triple-A Iowa For 'Slacktide' — which forms the back half of Twyla Tharp's 60th anniversary 'Diamond Jubilee' running through Saturday at the Harris Theater — the prolific choreographer revisited composer Philip Glass for the first time since 'In the Upper Room.' Read more here. More top Eat. Watch. Do. stories: Review: For Jack White's set at the Salt Shed, rock 'n' roll was alive and well Review: In its remake of the TV series, 'Smash' on Broadway is anything but China announced today that it will raise tariffs on U.S. goods from 84% to 125% — the latest salvo in an escalating trade war between the world's two largest economies that has rattled markets and raised fears of a global slowdown. Read more here. More top stories from around the world: Now that they've passed a budget plan, the hard part begins for Republicans Three die when plane crashes, burns on railroad tracks near I-95 in Boca Raton

Afternoon Briefing: Illinois House fail to pass convicted youth resentencing bill
Afternoon Briefing: Illinois House fail to pass convicted youth resentencing bill

Chicago Tribune

time11-04-2025

  • Business
  • Chicago Tribune

Afternoon Briefing: Illinois House fail to pass convicted youth resentencing bill

Good afternoon, Chicago. In a surprising loss for criminal justice reform advocates, Democrats were unable to pass legislation providing more resentencing options for people in prison convicted of committing crimes when they were under 21. The bill not only was a setback for advocates but also underscored a political divide between progressives and moderates within the Democratic Party, which has a supermajority in the House. The measure sponsored by Chicago Democratic state Rep. Theresa Mah was defeated late yesterday 51-49 — 11 votes short of passage as several Democrats, including from the suburbs and downstate, either voted against the bill or did not vote at all. Here's what else is happening today. And remember, for the latest breaking news in Chicago, visit and sign up to get our alerts on all your devices. Hundreds crowd Deerfield school board meeting over transgender student dispute The meeting followed the announcement by American First Legal, a conservative nonprofit, that it had filed a complaint with the criminal section of the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division urging it to investigate District 109 and its administrators over an alleged incident of female students at Shepard Middle School being forced by staffers to change in front of a transgender girl, an allegation the district has denied. Read more here. Trying to find its footing, Portillo's takes breakfast for a test run The trial breakfast menu — which will be available daily at five Chicago-area restaurants starting April 15 — comes as the homegrown chain has struggled at times to find its footing amid ambitious national expansion plans. Read more here. More top business stories: NFL mock draft 2.0: Who will the Chicago Bears select with the No. 10 pick? Offseason moves have led GM Ryan Poles to feel like the Chicago Bears can lean toward the best player available in the 2025 NFL draft. Read more here. For 'Slacktide' — which forms the back half of Twyla Tharp's 60th anniversary 'Diamond Jubilee' running through Saturday at the Harris Theater — the prolific choreographer revisited composer Philip Glass for the first time since 'In the Upper Room.' Read more here. More top Eat. Watch. Do. stories: China hits back at US and will raise tariffs on American goods from 84% to 125% China announced today that it will raise tariffs on U.S. goods from 84% to 125% — the latest salvo in an escalating trade war between the world's two largest economies that has rattled markets and raised fears of a global slowdown. Read more here.

Review: Twyla Tharp Dance celebrates 60 years with something old, something new in stunning night at the Harris
Review: Twyla Tharp Dance celebrates 60 years with something old, something new in stunning night at the Harris

Chicago Tribune

time11-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Chicago Tribune

Review: Twyla Tharp Dance celebrates 60 years with something old, something new in stunning night at the Harris

It starts where 'In the Upper Room' ends. The opening image of Twyla Tharp's newest dance, 'Slacktide,' is a single dancer, facing upstage, a beam of white light illuminating only his forearm. He slowly, methodically, closes his fist and draws his elbow down toward his waist. It's a fist pump. A transposition of the final moment in Tharp's 1986 tour de force. For 'Slacktide' — which forms the back half of Tharp's 60 th anniversary 'Diamond Jubilee' running through Saturday at the Harris Theater — the prolific choreographer revisited composer Philip Glass for the first time since 'In the Upper Room.' A thrilling interpretation of Glass' 1999 half-hour score 'Aguas da Amazonia' has been realized by Chicago-based Third Coast Percussion, who play live at the Harris with Chicago flutist Constance Volk. Third Coast, by the way, is celebrating a milestone of its own, releasing a 20 th anniversary album Friday with works by Jlin, Tigran Hamasyan, Zakir Hussain, Jessie Montgomery and Musekiwa Chingodza. 'Aguas da Amazonia' came out on CD and vinyl earlier this year, with original cover art by Volk. 'Slacktide's' ensemble, save that lone, fist-pumping dancer, enters from stage left. Hands lead the way, appearing disembodied for a tongue-in-cheek moment that can't last. Ten silky smooth dancers slither onstage, translating the undulating waves of Third Coast's sound — a mixed pallet drawing from Glass' original piano score and the Brazilian group Uakti, who were first to record 'Aguas da Amazonia' in 2006. It's a fascinating instrumentation — two marimbas, including one made of glass; tuned PVC pipes and cowbells; Norwegian and African drums; flute; synthesizers and maybe a few more things I'm missing. Glass was inspired by the Amazon's rivers in making this music. Pro forma for Tharp, 'Slacktide' is not at all about that. Her own instrumentation is her iconoclastic blend of classic and contemporary vocabulary oscillating between presentational formality and pedestrian nonchalance. 'Slacktide' asks a lot of its dancers, a young and exceptional ensemble of freelancers whose resumes collectively include Miami City Ballet, Limon, Gibney Company, Mark Morris Dance Group, Kansas City Ballet, English National Ballet, and the list goes on. Indeed, they are a terrific group — placed in a stunningly rich container by lighting designer Justin Townsend. Costume designer Victoria Bek's black-on-black separates balance Townsend's deeply saturated, high-definition color pallet — the exact opposite of his understated shifts in mood employed during the concert's first hour. That's 'Diabelli,' an exhaustive exploration of all 33 of Ludwig van Beethoven's variations on a waltz by one of Beethoven's contemporaries, Antonin Diabelli. Like Beethoven, Tharp creates a utilitarian theme as a jumping-off point for mostly jovial dalliances between gaggles of dancers and a rather pleasant power struggle between the dancers, pianist Vladimir Rumyantsev, who plays live from the orchestra pit — and the audience. There's enough of a pause between several of the variations to feel compelled to clap, but not quite enough room to feel good about having done so. It's quintessential Tharp, exploring the innards of a brilliant piece of music in ways both playful and serious. In moments, it's literal child's play: high fives, leapfrog, Red Rover, Ring Around the Rosie, cartwheels and somersaults. Tharp disassociates Beethoven's rhythmic and melodic structures from their 1820s roots, finding the piece jazzy enough for a jitterbug and folksy enough for a mazurka. And apart from its faux tuxedo unitards, 'Diabelli' could be mistaken for having been made yesterday until you place it side-by-side with shiny new 'Slacktide.' That's not to say either piece looks exactly like what other choreographers are making now. Hers is a singular voice. Serious and silly. Classic and contemporary. Rigorous and rule breaking. Tharp is a genre. She is her own category of dance. 1 of Twyla Tharp Dance's 60th anniversary 'Diamond Jubilee' performance at the Harris Theater in Chicago is accompanied by Chicago-based Third Coast Percussion and flutist Constance Volk. (Kyle Flubacker) I recall being pretty unimpressed 10 years ago when the company toured the Auditorium for their 50 th anniversary. Why make something new (and frankly unremarkable), I thought, when such a milestone begs for a nostalgic gaze at some of the more iconic works from Tharp's catalog: 'Push Comes to Shove' (1976), 'Baker's Dozen' (1979), 'Deuce Coupe' (1973), 'The Fugue' (1970) and 'In the Upper Room,' for example. Lately, Tharp has seemed more willing to revisit the past. In 2017, she excavated original notes from some of her first dances. A few years ago, she restaged 'In the Upper Room' and 'Nine Sinatra Songs.' And she obviously doesn't resist the urge here in ways both literal and abstract. In a recent interview with the Tribune, she said she picked 'Diabelli' because 'it's a difficult piece to remount and I knew if I didn't put it up, it would get lost.' But it's as though Tharp, who perhaps more than any living choreographer has nothing left to prove, can't rest on her laurels. On Thursday, she did not bow with her company, letting them have all the praise. She made a new dance for her 60 th anniversary because making dances is her job. And she does it better than anyone. Lauren Warnecke is a freelance critic. When: 7:30 p.m. Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday Where: Harris Theater for Music and Dance, 205 E. Randolph St.

Review: A Tharp Master Class on Themes, Variations and Allusions
Review: A Tharp Master Class on Themes, Variations and Allusions

New York Times

time13-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

Review: A Tharp Master Class on Themes, Variations and Allusions

In the middle of Beethoven's 'Diabelli Variations,' from 1823, the pianist's left hand starts rocking up and down the keyboard in a pattern that sounds uncannily like boogie-woogie from the 1930s and '40s. For a choreographer courageous enough to tackle that score, this is low-hanging fruit. It's easy to be witty by having the dancers jitterbug, with women tossed over the shoulders of their partners and hung upside down. Twyla Tharp does this in her 'Diabelli Variations' (1998), but the difference between Tharp and other choreographers is that by this point in her dance, the over-the-shoulder lift has already been introduced (and earned a laugh). Theme and variations is an ideal form for her brilliant mind, and her 'Diabelli' is a masterwork. What's more, with Tharp the jitterbug moves aren't just an allusion to a seemingly incongruous historical rhyme; they're an allusion to herself and her signature way of mixing American social dances into her American classicism. At New York City Center on Wednesday, Tharp's 'Diabelli Variations' had its New York debut as part of a tour celebrating her 60th year as a choreographer. That's a lot of past to draw upon. The little-seen 'Diabelli' is a treasure from the vault, but its new companion piece, 'Slacktide,' is full of fruitful recycling and repurposing, too. The challenge of the Beethoven score (excellently played at City Center by Vladimir Rumyantsev) is its one-thing-after-another quality, an hour of music divided by 33. There has to be enough repetition and backward references to hold the dance together but also enough transformation to keep it surprising and moving forward. Like a form-producing machine on overdrive — symmetry and asymmetry, duets doubled and tripled, five-part canons! — Tharp maximizes both. Beethoven took a mediocre theme by Anton Diabelli as material with which to demonstrate his own unparalleled virtuosity. Tharp takes Beethoven's virtuosity as a partner for hers, and that of her 10 terrific dancers. As she introduces her movement motifs and shows how they change in different choreographic and musical contexts, she continually marks details in the score. But unlike choreographers who follow the map of the music, Tharp creates her own. She might repeat a section exactly, or with a twist, but not because Beethoven does. Because she is Tharp, the grand design incorporates vaudeville gags. Dancers bump into each other, face-off, mock fight. One section for two men plays with the old 'I'm in front — no I'm in front' bit, which Tharp mines for its classic humor and revives with clever variation. But even these comedy bits are ultimately just movement material. When Tharp brings them back, they might be tender or pure form. Throughout, Tharp distributes little suggestions of interpersonal relationships and dramatic situations. (She can do that, too.) A few duets go further, expanding into resonant scenes. In one, a woman is searching for something or someone but it's not the man with her; he rolls on the floor, and she steps over him unaware. For Tharp aficionados, the tuxedo fronts on Geoffrey Beene's sleeveless costumes for 'Diabelli' recall Kermit Love's sleeveless, backless tuxedos for Tharp's 'Eight Jelly Rolls' (1971). In 'Slacktide,' Tharp's self-allusion is even more specific: It's the first move, isolated in light: a raised fist pulled down, which is also the final gesture from 'In the Upper Room' (1986). 'In the Upper Room' had a score by Philip Glass, and so does 'Slacktide': his 'Águas da Amazônia,' in a new arrangement played live by Third Coast Percussion. Where in 'Upper Room' the fist is yanked down, here it is lowered slowly. The dancers move in slow-motion, as if underwater. As if out of the murk, another current surfaces: a loose, limb flinging, heavily torqued wildness. Alongside this movement contrast, Tharp incorporates fragments of story. At one point, the dancers look like tourists; at another, like the guys and girls groupings in 'Grease.' It all merges into a flow that threatens to stall but doesn't. Kind of like Tharp's creativity. Programmed after 'Diabelli,' the much shorter 'Slacktide' might have looked like an afterthought. Many of Tharp's recyclings in recent pieces have seemed like worn-out chewing gum (a Tharp simile) or lazy shorthand, but this new work — set to Glass, the arch-self-plagiarizer, who took a bow on Wednesday — is fresh enough to hold its own. As the Glass score is obviously a Glass piece, 'Slacktide' is obviously a Tharp, and a good one. The measure of quality isn't whether Tharp is repeating herself but how. And it's important she doesn't allude only to herself. 'Diabelli' is chock-full of nods to predecessors. I spotted some Agnes de Mille, Alvin Ailey, Paul Taylor and, of course, George Balanchine. One of central motifs of 'Diabelli' and its final move — a fall that ends with the dancer stretched out along the floor — comes from Balanchine's 1934 'Serenade.' It's just a fall that Tharp uses like any other bit of movement material. But she knows what it means. It's a nod to the past that connects her to a pantheon. A bold move, but not an unjustified one.

The Transformer: Twyla Tharp Dives Into the Future
The Transformer: Twyla Tharp Dives Into the Future

New York Times

time11-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

The Transformer: Twyla Tharp Dives Into the Future

It could be the middle of the ocean on a starless night, but it's a stage. An arm reaches up, glowing like a beacon of light. It lowers — slowly, deliberately — sliding into the darkness. A piece of movement is nothing without context. Twyla Tharp created that arm gesture nearly 40 years ago as the emphatic closing image of her celebrated 'In the Upper Room' (1986), in which two women — the 'stompers' — yank down a fist in victory. It's as much a physical movement as a celebration of making it to the top of a choreographic Mount Everest. During a recent interview, Tharp, 83, hopped from a chair to her feet to illustrate its emphatic power. 'Where that came from is the notion of pulling down a shade,' she said. 'Blackout!' That dance unspools to a propulsive mix of ballet, modern dance and even calisthenics to music by Philip Glass. It ends with the sense of an exhalation, a release. But what if that final exhalation from 'In the Upper Room' turned into an inhalation? What if an ending became a beginning? 'Slacktide,' Tharp's newest dance, is also set to Glass, his 'Aguas da Amazonia,' in a new arrangement created and performed by Third Coast Percussion. It starts where 'In the Upper Room' left off. 'I take that last move and make it go incredibly slow into the future,' Tharp said. 'Into another place, and that other place is a transformation.' The idea of transformation is a potent and poignant thread of Tharp's program at New York City Center, beginning Wednesday. The program also celebrates a milestone: her 60th anniversary as a dance artist — a diamond jubilee for one of the most important choreographers America has produced. The show pairs 'Slacktide' with the New York debut of her transcendent 'Diabelli' (1998), set to Beethoven's 'Diabelli Variations.' (Created for her Tharp! company, 'Diabelli' premiered in Italy and was performed in only three other places.) Tharp sees connections between the two works. 'Slacktide' was choreographed when 'Diabelli' was being reconstructed, and moments of the older dance have made their way into the new. But 'Slacktide' references material that goes back farther into the past. The movement for the central female figure of 'Slacktide,' Marzia Memoli, a Martha Graham and ballet-trained dancer, has been resurrected from Tharp's archive of video improvisation sessions — stitched together and reimagined for today. 'It's the fundamental question of any artist: How do you deal with the past?' Tharp said. 'If you're going to pretend like there's not one, you're not going to be very useful to anybody. So then the question becomes, how are you going to use it? And what's relevant in it and what's interesting, and even what's beautiful in it?' Tharp still finds a line from her 'Bix Pieces' (1972), for which she wrote the text, useful: 'Nothing new has been added, much has been forgotten, and it is all different again.' Throughout her robust career, Tharp has transformed both modern and classical dance, making patterns more layered, more intricate — for her, geometry is content, conflict and resolution — and building a movement vocabulary that binds looseness with precision. The mix of polished structure and body intelligence that a Tharp dance demands allows dancers to be themselves inside the works. Tharp's gift to the world is the idea of what American classical dance can be: unpretentious, technically complex, joyful and with every nerve activated. It's the way exuberance emboldens and refines classical dancing. Counterbalance is poise, and equilibrium is a meeting of heart, humor and tenacity. 'Diabelli,' a monumental dance, has everything of Tharp inside it. For roughly an hour, the dancers — playful, effusive, somber, heroic — glide among the many moods of Beethoven's variations as they somehow dissolve the delicate line between dancing and simply moving. As Tharp lifts the witty, danceable notes into the air and grounds them with kinetic weight, she shows that to dance is to be fully alive. The ebullience is part of the sophistication of 'Diabelli.' For the 10 dancers, it's a tour de force, and for the pianist, too. (Vladimir Rumyantsev will perform live.) Following the pattern of the music, how Beethoven addresses the theme, Tharp said, she sees transformation as one variation moves and morphs into the next. 'They're like beads on a necklace,' she said. 'It's not one whole stream from beginning to end. It's 33 separate seeds.' Tharp was originally urged to take on the Beethoven score by the pianist Alfred Brendel, whom she met while working in London. She thought it was a crazy idea, but, 'He said, 'It's so funny, you should do it,'' she said. So she did. The dance shares something with 'an old, well-structured variety show,' Tharp said, where 'you have to constantly refer to what just happened, but it has to be different enough to jar the audience.' 'It can't be totally out of left field or people are going to feel disconnected,' she added. 'But it also has got to be different enough that you're refreshed by the next act.' At the start, dancers cross the stage in staggered lines as they sway their arms from side to side and pause to bounce in plié. A charming lift has a woman straddled on the shoulder of a man before falling sideways like a paper doll and strapped behind him in an elegant, deadpan version of a piggyback ride. As one movement phrase morphs into the next, the dichotomy of opposing sensations is the strength of its vision: 'Diabelli' may be grand, but it grooves. 'Slacktide' has a different feel and look — while 'Diabelli' is presented in black and white, the lighting in 'Slacktide' is a shock of color. This ballet is meditative yet builds on itself as dancers swirl and glide, sometimes as if they were moving on ice. And then there is Memoli's material, which takes the dance back to a time when Tharp was in her 50s and improvising to explore classical technique, experimenting with movement — spatially, rhythmically and sequentially. She was reinventing: stripping out preparations, pairing a loose top of the body with a classically held center, and using torque as a way to allow for more suspension. When Memoli, who left the Graham company in 2024 to join Tharp's tour, first watched the videos, she said her first thought was, 'Wow, how can she move like this?' Memoli and Tharp worked together to turn steps from those improvisations into phrase material. Memoli said it was — and remains — a challenge for her to move with more weight, to drop the pelvis instead of lift it. Graham is modern and grounded, but Tharp's approach is different. One day, Tharp told Memoli to feel like a sponge full of water. 'She was like, 'Feel heavy,'' Memoli said. 'When I dance Graham, I never feel heavy. Never. She worked a lot on my ankles and my feet.' She added, 'I learned that sometimes my impulse needs to start from my imagination and not from my body.' Instead of going for everything 100 percent, she has learned to pull her focus inward. 'Something that she always tell me is: 'Don't perform. Let the audience come to you. They will come. Trust it.'' Dreamier than 'Diabelli,' 'Slacktide' takes place in an in-between world that emphasizes fluidity. 'Slacktide,' also set to Glass, doesn't have the punch of 'In the Upper Room'; instead it embraces the idea of flow and, again, transformation. It's named after the time when the tide seems to stand still before reversing, the moment when, as Tharp said, the out becomes the in. 'You can either think absolute stasis, which is actually what it is — it's no momentum — or you can think, all movement,' Tharp said. 'You can think all possibilities are right there at that moment.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store