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- <text id=92TT0821>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: Profile:Mark Morris
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 66
- Making The Right Moves
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Outrageous, outspoken and outstandingly talented, choreographer
- Mark Morris is back in the U.S. after three tempestuous years
- abroad
- </p>
- <p>By Janice C. Simpson
- </p>
- <p> After more than 90 minutes of nonstop kicks, leaps and
- turns, the 27 dancers, sweating through their leotards, are
- beginning to drag. But Mark Morris, the precisionist putting
- them through these paces, is unmoved by their exhaustion. "A
- little dynamism would help," he drawls, drawing on the Dunhill
- cigarette he has been using to tap out the beat.
- </p>
- <p> The dancers try again, but their taskmaster is notoriously
- difficult to please. Cigarette dangling from his hand and his
- Tiny Tim-style ringlets bouncing on his shoulders, he strides
- to the middle of the floor to show them how the steps should be
- done. Morris, 35, is tall and bulky. There is more than a hint
- of flab around his waist, an authentic beer belly, the result
- of a prodigious thirst that can cause him to put away as many
- as four bottles within an hour. No one in the room looks less
- like a dancer. But as he performs the individual steps, they
- suddenly coalesce into a transcendent mix of movement, music and
- soul-stirring emotion.
- </p>
- <p> Having accomplished this alchemy, Morris takes another
- puff and nods for the dancers to start again. "Be expressive,"
- he commands. "Milk it. When it's expressive, it's a lot more
- interesting. When it's just steps, that's bad news. And when
- you're embarrassed about doing the steps, that's really bad
- news. You can't be a performing artist and be embarrassed."
- </p>
- <p> Richly expressive and almost never embarrassed,
- choreographer Mark Morris has been one of the most interesting
- and original artists in the modern-dance world for more than a
- decade now. In recent years he has gained wider fame through his
- association with Mikhail Baryshnikov, with whom he co-founded
- the White Oak Dance Project. Their sold-out shows across the
- country have introduced new audiences to the choreographer's
- work. Now, after three years of voluntary--and controversial--exile in Brussels, this wunderkind of American dance has
- returned to the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Morris' offstage performances have sometimes been as
- outrageous as his onstage productions. He first caused tongues
- to wag in 1984 when he jumped up in the middle of a performance
- of Twyla Tharp's Nine Sinatra Songs and shouted his displeasure
- at the stage before walking out. "I think she's a great
- choreographer, but I hated that dance. It was horrible," he says
- now. "You know, a lot of people go along with things. But if I
- don't like something, I'm like `Yech, come on, everybody, let's
- open our eyes.' " Morris provoked an eye-opener of a different
- sort three years ago when he appeared in a series of photographs
- in Vanity Fair wearing lipstick, eye shadow, earrings and not
- much else.
- </p>
- <p> An open homosexual who customarily wears the pink triangle
- of gay liberation on his lapel, Morris regularly criticizes
- others in the dance community for failing to come out. "I'm
- tired of choreographers who are gay pretending that they are
- straight," he says. In his dances, duets are often performed by
- dancers of the same sex and androgynous dress is pushed to the
- point where men have worn tutus. Says Morris: "Passing is a way
- of agreeing with the prevalent culture that gay is a bad thing.
- I'm out partly because it's the way I am as a guy and partly
- because it's my responsibility in the public eye to be gay."
- </p>
- <p> Behind all that public posturing, however, is a dedicated
- artist who is widely acknowledged as the legitimate heir to the
- tradition of distinctively visceral dancing that traces its
- roots back to Martha Graham and Isadora Duncan. His musical
- gifts are both instinctive and sophisticated; in this he is
- linked to Balanchine.
- </p>
- <p> He may dream up what for some are odd pas de deux, but
- this postmodern master maintains his allegiance to such
- old-fashioned values as form and narrative. "I am very, very
- strict structurally," he says. "You can break any rule you want,
- but you have to have a clue about what the rules are." Morris
- makes up full-bodied dances that celebrate the pure joy of
- movement, usually spiked with an irreverent wit. "The knee-jerk
- response is to assume that a lot of what I do is parody or
- sarcastic when it actually isn't," he observes. "I'm interested
- in the story and really good dancing. But you know, you can't
- force people to get that."
- </p>
- <p> A precocious child, Morris and his two older sisters grew
- up in Seattle in a family that encouraged creativity. A typical
- party at the Morris home was a Bastille Day celebration in
- which guests were invited to come dressed as their favorite
- subject from the French Revolution. Morris' father William, a
- high school English teacher and amateur musician, taught his son
- to read music when he was just four. His mother Maxine, a dance
- aficionado with a special fondness for flamenco, took him to see
- the Jose Greco company when he was eight. It was love at first
- jete. A local dance teacher gave him a scholarship, and by the
- time he was 13, Morris was choreographing pieces. "I'd make up
- these dances, and they were really cool," he recalls. "All the
- steps and everything I do now was there in germ form."
- </p>
- <p> Moving to New York City in 1976, he whirled through a
- quick succession of jobs with such big-name choreographers as
- Eliot Feld, Lar Lubovitch, Laura Dean and Hannah Kahn. "I didn't
- have a giant attention span," he says, explaining why he was so
- peripatetic. But that was only part of the reason. "Modern
- dancers are not trained to do anything but follow directions,"
- says Erin Matthiessen, his former lover; Morris met him when
- they both danced in the Dean company. "Mark thought for
- himself." Too often, he thought aloud, arguing with the
- choreographers, making unwanted suggestions on how he thought
- they should develop their dances. Finally, in 1980, Morris
- rented Merce Cunningham's studio for two nights and presented
- a program of his own works, including O Rangasayee, a stunning
- 20-minute solo to an Indian raga that marked him as a talent to
- watch.
- </p>
- <p> Eight years later, at the invitation of Gerard Mortier,
- director of the Theatre Royal de la Monnaie in Brussels, the
- young American replaced Maurice Bejart as resident choreographer
- for Belgium's national opera house. The deal included doubling
- the size of the company to 24, spacious rehearsal studios,
- production budgets of up to $1 million for new works, and most
- important, the opportunity to work with live musicians. The
- Belgian capital's reputation for good food and great beer didn't
- hurt either.
- </p>
- <p> Once there, his creative juices flowing, he produced 10
- new dances that include three masterworks: L'Allegro, il
- Penseroso ed il Moderato, an elegant composition set to the
- Handel oratorio; Dido and Aeneas, a sensuous interpretation of
- Purcell's opera; and The Hard Nut, a delightful high-camp
- version of The Nutcracker. But Morris' personal style alienated
- his Belgian patrons. While his American fans may have considered
- him an enfant terrible, the Belgians thought it was just plain
- terrible when he described Bejart's work as merde or referred
- to Flemish choreographer Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker as Annie
- Tearjerker. Accustomed to the extravagant productions that
- Bejart mounted, they were also put off by Morris' deceptively
- simple choreography.
- </p>
- <p> Never one to suffer criticism gracefully, Morris lashed
- back. Belgians, he told a reporter, were "highly racist, highly
- sexist, highly homophobic." The final showdown came when the
- company performed Mythologies, a trilogy based on essays by
- Roland Barthes that ended with all the dancers stripped naked.
- The next day the French-language daily Le Soir carried the
- English headline, MARK MORRIS GO HOME!
- </p>
- <p> He acknowledges that his Belgian sojourn did have some
- advantages. "I like big shows," he explains. "There I could get
- a giant set or expensive costumes that allowed me to use that
- part of my imagination." Company members say the reception might
- have been better had Morris been more diplomatic, but the
- choreographer concedes few regrets. "Better means what? No
- waves?" he asks. "Well, the company got better. I made up really
- good work. So what could be better?"
- </p>
- <p> This month the Mark Morris Dance Group makes its
- homecoming debut in New York City with two programs that include
- two world premieres. The economic realities of running a dance
- company in the U.S. are, if anything, worse now than when he
- left, but Morris has been taken up by a chic set. Vogue magazine
- editor in chief Anna Wintour and Bloomingdale chairman Marvin
- Traub hosted a fund raiser for him last year at Manhattan's
- hyper-trendy Paramount Hotel. Foundation support is coming in
- too, as well as a MacArthur genius grant.
- </p>
- <p> The dance community, envious of all the fame and good
- fortune that has come his way, is waiting to see if he will
- stumble. But Morris confidently stands his ground. "People say,
- `How do you top that?' " he says, referring to the work he
- created in Brussels. "Well, you don't. You do something
- different." And if that doesn't work out? Well, it's unlikely
- that Mark Morris will be embarrassed about it.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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