For his 90th birthday, the choreographer Merce Cunningham threw his usual surprise party – where no one knows anyone. The set, the music and the dance don’t meet until the day of the premiere.
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| Contrary impulses: ‘Nearly Ninety’ |
It was worth it, however. For its first 45 minutes, Nearly Ninety consists mainly of those entrancing Cunningham adagios where limbs frame open space as a latticed window might frame paradise. These sequences emanate profound calm. The dance’s second half moves faster and more unpredictably, with a series of solos whose steps contain such contrary muscular impulses that the dancers almost grind to a halt.
The whole work, in fact, plays with paralysis. In the duets and trios, the men take on the role of certain limbs of the women they’re squiring. As the luminous Holley Farmer, for example, dives backwards, two men substitute for her arms, restraining her so her head grazes the floor. Her dancing is at once headlong and held back.
The pathos in that paradox runs through Nearly Ninety, but not all the dancers discover it. To find the freedom – and humanity – in Cunningham’s steps, the dancer has to be deeply familiar with his enormous lexicon. A 12-year veteran of the troupe, Farmer has that advantage, as does Daniel Squire, in his 11th year.
Last month, Cunningham told Farmer and Squire he wouldn’t need them any more. It was a Lear-like gesture. Someone should have taken the role of Cordelia and told the old man he was wrong. ★★★★☆

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