[Tango-A] REVIEW OF MIGUEL ANGEL ZOTTO'S TANGO X 2 IN EXPLORE DANCE

Jorge Midon jorgemidon at gmail.com
Wed Feb 14 16:45:38 EST 2007


      Miguel Angel Zotto's Tango X 2 - Su Historia by Susan
Weinrebe<http://www.exploredance.com/list.htm?sid=216&s=author>
January 25, 2007  City Center <http://nycitycenter.org/>
130 West 56th Street
(Audience Entrance is on West 55th Street between 6th and 7th Avenues)
New York, NY 10019
212.247.0430  Jenny Wesnousky's
Review<http://www.exploredance.com/article.htm?id=1711>
Robert Abrams' Critique <http://www.exploredance.com/article.htm?id=1706>
Susan Weinrebe's Review <http://www.exploredance.com/article.htm?id=1741>

Tango X2 Website <http://www.tangox2.com/>    Say the word "tango" and
people think, passion! <http://www.visavismag.com/content/view/104/76/>It is
not necessary to be a tango dancer oneself or to recognize and name each
step of the complex footwork of the choreography. One only has to keep a
sharp eye on the feet, the bodies, the faces of the performers to be
thrilled by the complexity and heat of the lavishly danced *Tango X 2*.

Miguel Angel Zotto, the maestro leading the dancers, musicians and singers
of his show, did a great service for those in the audience who want to love
tango and have much to learn. Film clips of tango icons, places,
performances, backgrounds for the stage action and narrative, added
instruction as images played across a large screen located behind the
elevated platform on which the musicians performed.

The first act of *Tango X 2* showcased choreography from past performances
as pairs and groups of dancers alternated with narrative or singing by
Claudio Garcés and Vanesa Quiroz. At a breathlessly rapid pace, Act One was
divided into three parts.

"Voices" went back to the roots of the dancers and evolution of tango as
film clips which featured the men who popularized the dance. It's not
surprising that tango was born in brothels, practiced by men with one
another as they waited. The smolder of the dance had to come from somewhere!
Entwining legs, chest-to-chest embrace and eyes locked onto the partner's or
following the same line of direction are intensely direct displays of dance
as seduction and love making.

Movie clips of tango immortals, Carlos Gardel, Roberto Firpo, and "El
Cachafaz" were an introduction to the background of the men who devised the
stylized movements associated with the dance. Meanwhile, partners danced in
the style of those great figures, recreating their signature techniques.

Swiftly transitioning to the next segment, "Choreography Collage," a
banquette of dance styles and vignettes raced on the heels of one another,
highlighting dozens and dozens of routines through the show. There was
American style tango, "back to front" tango, romantic, modern, salon,
Hollywood, and traditional tango. There was more narrative and more singing
and one didn't have to understand Spanish to feel the heat of the soul in
the words. Especially wonderful was Ms. Quiroz who held the attention of the
audience with her beautiful voice and style as she also danced!

"An Elegant Nightclub" featured the setting of a chi-chi 1940's Parisian
nightclub. The three scene shifts of the act allowed for quick changes of
dancers and costumes, almost dizzying in their glamour and inventiveness as
each dance seemed to vie with the previous to better it, building to a
crescendo of impassioned music and dance seduction for an all company
finale.

Act Two contained elements of near surrealism as more tango history
unfolded. In the first segment, a tragic drama was revealed: Polish girls
who arrived in Buenos Aires to make their fortunes, instead, were sold into
brothels. Scenes portraying the immigrants stripped of their clothes (though
really wearing body stockings) and being inducted into the sex trade, were
graphic and sad. Dancers utilizing movement, that universal means of
communication, managed quite well to convey this sordid part of tango's
history.

In another segment, department store mannequins came to life to dance.
Finally, a tribute to the composer, Astor Piazolla, brought the whole
company on stage to nail a resounding mélange of virtuoso dancing for the
conclusion.

The caliber of dancing the night I saw *Tango X 2* was stellar! One way that
I judge a performance is by the chances taken – perfection, not necessarily
being what makes a great show. In tango, timing is of the essence as the
partners flirt dangerously by rapidly kicking forward, backward, between the
other's legs, changing direction, being lifted and flung into leg extending
postures, and freezing in mid-motion for a pause even more telling than the
frenetic action a moment before.

The most crowd-pleasing moment came with the virtuoso performance of Miguel
Zotto and Romina Levin when he danced on air. That is, while partnering Ms.
Levin in a blurringly fast series of twists, Mr. Zotto pivoted one foot on
stage and the other off. His daring and speed were a demonstration of his
mastery and the audience adored it.

What to wear to the seduction? There's never a question in tango. The men
wore black slacks and often jackets with shoes the colors of a peacock's
strut, the better to call attention to their footwork. The women were
slashed to here and slit to there, clingy, sparkly, diaphanous materials
showing off their gorgeous real-woman bodies and making the most of all
their moves.

*Tango X 2* was a show with broad enough appeal even for the yet-to-be
initiated *tangueros*, and if ever one wanted a lesson in the language of
passion, this would be the show to see.

------------------------------

*Miguel Angel Zotto: Lead Dancer
Romina Levin, Diego Escobar & Iliana Mohaupt, Gabriel Ponce & Analia
Morales, Leandro Oliver & Laila Rezk, Hector Falcon & Loredana De Brasi,
Pablo Garcia & Carina Morrudo, Federico Farfaro & Mariana Dragone: Dancers

Andres Linetzky: Musical Director
Claudio Garcés, Vanesa Quiroz

Orchestra
Andres Linetsky: Piano
Pocho Palmer: First Bandoneón
Alejandro Schaikis: First Violin
Alejandro Prevignano: Second Bandoneón
Jorge Caldelari: Second Violin
Nicolas Zacarias: Bass
Tito Egurza: Stage Set and Multimedia Design
Renata Schussheim, Jorge Ferrari, Maria Julia Bertotto, Daniela Taina:
Costume Design
Tito Egurza, Andres Mattiauda, Miguel Angel Zotto: Lighting Design
Andres Mattiauda: Director's Assistant
Miguel Angel Zotto: Concept, Choreography, General Direction
Scott Klein: Public Relations*

The company of Tango x 2 performs "Su Historia"

Photo courtesy of Tango X 2
------------------------------

Miguel Angel Zotto and Romina Godoy of Tango x 2 perform "Su Historia"

Photo courtesy of Tango X 2
------------------------------

Miguel Angel Zotto and Romina Levin of Tango x 2 perform "Su Historia"

Photo courtesy of Tango X 2
------------------------------

The cast of Tango x 2 in "Su Historia"

Photo courtesy of Tango X 2
------------------------------

Miguel Angel Zotto and Romina Levin in Tango x 2's "Su Historia"

Photo courtesy of Tango X 2


-- 
JorgeMidon
jorgemidon at gmail.com
Jorge Midon Productions
PO Box 2824
Santa Fe, NM 87507 USA
Tel/Fax 505-579-4647
Cell 505-670-1575
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