by Norbert Kovacs
sparkling wine
Sally had been a professional dancer for twenty years so knew the dance
repertoire. She had performed those by famous choreographers many times in many
spaces and now delivered them without flaw. She no longer read the reviews that
said she was a masterful dancer since she had been told it many times. She did
not regret passing on them, either. Sally had become disaffected with dancing
since she was middle aged and even showed it through in her graying, curly hair
and crease-ridden face. Her dark-brown eyes, once bright, drooped for the same
reason. When she danced, she did so precisely, making it appear she had planned
her every step. Her quicker, shorter dances sometimes looked mechanical. If she
made missteps in rehearsal, she did it because she wished not to dwell on an
arrangement she knew already. To vary what she performed, Sally reworked dances
that she had done into new pieces. She spliced together the formal steps of
ballet with the fast motions of modern; she used pieces of popular and folk
though she felt these last not her style. Her fellow dancers who respected
Sally’s experience sometimes performed these dances with her. These novel
experiments did not coalesce well, Sally found. The audience clapped for them,
the reviews gave some lukewarm praise but not the emphatic kind Sally had
received earlier. She was disappointed by it. In coming to rehearsals, she no
longer looked at the scuffed studio floor that she danced over the day. She
watched instead younger dancers re-create the steps and gestures that she knew.
She thought lately she might quit dancing but did not imagine what else she
might do. She did not feel cut out to teach.
Sally was brooding over a work she was to rehearse when she read in the
paper that a dancer would be performing at a long shuttered theatre in town. She
knew that several famous artists had performed at this theatre while it had
operated. She recalled a famous actress had been there to perform Shakespeare; a
soprano, a program of arias; and a respected pianist, a concerto with ensemble.
The theatre had held a reputation for these performances. However, the venue’s
usual fare, much less than these, was not enough to continue drawing the crowds
and the place had closed several years ago. Sally found it strange a performer
should choose to appear there now when many other spaces were available in the
city. When she asked her artist friends, they said they had not heard of the
dancer who would perform in the shuttered place. Sally, left wondering who the
dancer was, decided to go see her perform.
The night for the dance Sally walked the sidewalk from her apartment to
the old theatre. She felt guilty as she saw the lazy motion that her legs made
as she turned at the street corners. She had the habit to walk so and it had
embarrassed her more than once. Couldn’t I walk straight just once: I have the
control on stage, she thought as she hurried along. She arrived before the old
brick theatre fronted by Ionic columns. The local paper had bragged that the
place had "an apt, classic splendor for the fine performances given inside.” She
took the long flight of stone steps to the door, no longer veering to the side
as she went, bought her ticket, and entered the auditorium where many people had
gathered. She could tell several were established figures of the town by their
well-cut clothes and suits. She recognized a historian who had written of the
theatre in a city history. Near the wall sat a drama teacher who lead a
respected studio. Sally took her seat at mid-floor, draped her blazer over its
back, and unwound her scarf. Once she settled, the last comers took their seats.
The lights over the audience dimmed and the black curtain rose exposing the
stage.
The scene was the stage’s original linoleum floor and bare, back walls.
The floor had been swept clean but not polished, so that it had an old worn
appearance. The single prop to be seen was a pale, green oblong of hard plastic
standing waist high at stage center. A plain white light diffused over the
scene. There came hurried string music from the speakers above the stage and a
woman sped into view. She was a young, lean figure, shorter than most dancers
whom Sally knew. She had black hair, face of a cream color, and dark eyes. Her
chest was small and rounded, her arms and legs angular at the joints. Her tight
midsection tapered at the waist , fit from long practice at dance. She wore a
dark blue body suit cut at the elbow and the ankle that outlined her form well.
The dancer halted at stage front, her arms bent tensely at her sides, her hands
open, the fingers pointed down. At a start in the music, she turned and bolted
toward the back of the stage. She leapt as the violin music broke and landed
facing the stage back. She ran again with arching steps toward stage left,
leaped again, her legs kicking in the air and landed quietly before the wall.
Sally thought it a strange way to open a dance. She asked herself why, for one,
the dancer did not look toward the audience. As Sally watched, the dancer moved
by more short bolts and leaps around the stage, her face turned always from the
crowd.
A wilting, sad line of horns and oboes transformed the music. The dancer
strode by long, graceful steps in a diagonal across the stage, then back. She
moved in figure eights, each time stopping farther from the stage’s corners. Her
motion was tight, never straying from the shape of the eight. On her third
figure, she slowed, rolling her torso before she turned and for a first time
faced the audience. She crossed the stage, curling midway, returned to front
left, and circled herself in a loop. Sally found the turns out of place with the
woman's former flow of movement; it was as if her dance was falling apart when
it only had started. Sally's confusion grew as the young artist slowly confined
her motion to the stage front. The dancer turned in small loops, crossing her
own steps. These steps shortened until she circled once before the oblong. Her
motion had became extremely tight. Sally thought it a difficult, over-controlled
sequence to maintain. At last, the young woman drew her arms to her chest, bowed
her head, and held still.
The oboes and horns in the music fell quiet and the sound of flutes began
cautious and low. The dancer opened and unbent her left arm, the wrist catching
the white light from overhead. She curved her limb and let it sink, slow and
snakelike toward her tight stomach. Her arm moved with a lazy, idle languor that
she studied with interest. To Sally it seemed the dancer had forgotten her
earlier movement; the young woman hardly moved, absorbed as she became in her
self-study. The dancer next arched the left side of her body, her shoulder
suddenly slumping. A sinuous clarinet started in the music above the flutes and
the woman swept her left leg low over the floor. She made it go long, close to
the linoleum. Sally considered the cautious, reflective way the woman
maneuvered, more as if she demonstrated a motion rather than dance in any sense.
As the flutes performed lazy measures, the dancer arched and curved her
leg with the knee into a sharp peak, and drew it to her side. As the dancer
repeated the move, Sally wondered what the young woman aimed for doing it. She
watched the dancer bend and unbend her arms a second time. The woman curved them
like an S, all while following this motion curiously with her eyes, as if with
surprise. The motion seemed strange, unrehearsed. Finally, she jostled and
loosened each arm, dropping them. She had relaxed from her early
stiffness.
A high-pitched violin and a piercing oboe took over the music. The dancer
rippled from her left shoulder to the right, then down her arm and back across
her body. She sent wave motions across her legs, arching and twisting the limbs.
Sally smiled helplessly. She enjoyed these new, complex moves ; they made her
think of a usual dance, though she knew this was no usual one. The dancer next
sent twists from her leg across her torso. She gyrated her waist, and curved her
arms as she studied the moves, flowing and bending. Her legs rose and descended.
It’s like she is moving freely for the first time and not according to a
formula, Sally thought. As Sally watched, the dancer combined motions, curved
arm and leg at the same time, bent and unbent her torso.
The dancer looked intently at the audience whenever she now shifted her
body. Her expression seemed to ask something as Sally came to feel. She felt the
question behind the look, whatever it was, more insistent each time. Sally
puzzled why the dancer should want to ask anything and followed the performance
seeking an answer. In one part of the dance, the young artist shifted to a side
and promptly raised her eyes to the audience. Sally had a strange idea of a
sudden that the dancer was asking a question of her rather than anyone else. It
seemed bizarre to think; the dancer could have been studying anyone just as
well. However, Sally realized she very well might be right. The dancer's line
of sight crossed through her; she could have been looking only at her.
But what then had the dancer meant to ask? Sally had no answer as the young
woman stepped elsewhere.
A quick, bright oboe and violin announced the next lines of the music.
The dancer struck a full body pose at stage left, her back arched, her arms
high, studying the spot she had departed a moment earlier. A pride entered her
dark eyes, as if she reflected on a great feat she had achieved. Letting go the
form, the dancer hooked by quick steps to mid-stage. She halted before the large
oblong and raised her arms as if startled just as several violins sounded a
dark, ominous bar from the speakers. The sound worried Sally and she froze in
her seat as the performer did on stage. However, the young dancer relaxed and
leaned against the green oblong, arching her leg in the air behind her. She
seemed she was engaging the object, which she appeared unable to earlier. The
dancer brought her entire body onto the block, balling her form, and rolled onto
her side. Her motions, mimicking those she had done earlier, came now at the
ready. By a small effort, the dancer raised her torso and snaked up her body.
She arched her arm upward, following it with her eyes. Sally realized the woman
was building up her performance. She was drawing on the motions of earlier, of
curling her arms, bending her legs, to master the oblong space. She figured it
neatly, in fact. A flute sounded light, easy, and flowing. The dancer rolled
again on the oblong, curling a leg, then an arm. She looked at the audience, her
eyes on Sally. The same question came from her as earlier and Sally recognized
that she was being asked to respond. She looked on, fixed by the idea. The
dancer rolled again and raised her head. She bounced up, stood on the pale
oblong, and faced the ceiling.
The music became all violins, high in pitch, quick in tempo. The dancer
stepped from the oblong by eager steps, hooked by the wall of the stage and
leapt with it at her back. The vigorous move sent a jolt into Sally where she
sat in the audience. The dancer turned her leg, arched her arms, jutted forward
her knee. In this leap and those that followed, Sally felt the young woman had
brought the program completely around from the beginning. Everything in her
movement showed energy and a sense of command, even a feeling of success. The
dancer circled the stage, then bound to its front. Excited violins, horns, and
trumpets rose in harmony within the music. The mood infected Sally, lifting her.
The dancer raised her arms high, her legs stretched. Then she arched arm, leg,
torso. Her body rolled. She faced the audience. She faced Sally. She splayed
open her arms and rolled her head. She let her shoulders flow loosely. A heavy
drum beat sounded from the music speakers and the dancer halted. The music
finished and there was silence. The dance had ended and the theatre’s black
curtain fell.
When the theatergoers rose to leave, Sally saw the confusion in their
faces. She watched a suited man turn to his sequined wife and ask, “What was all
of that?” An elderly man and two aged women exchanged puzzled faces; the more
simple looking woman of the two said, “Could you make anything of her?” The
dance had mystified them and few seemed to accept, let alone have liked, the
performance. Perhaps, Sally thought, an art critic, if he were among them, would
write a poor review, contrasting the dance to the long idolized appearances by
the actress and the pianist in the theatre long ago. Sally appreciated why they
might reject it. She herself liked the established and the standard: it was her
repertoire. However, she felt she understood the basic meaning of this night’s
dance unlike the rest of the theatergoers. It was that the young dancer had seen
the old forms of dance and decided she must create a new one for herself. Sally
felt this stated the point exactly. The stark dance had played at boundaries,
experimented with motions, and combined and re-combined them in a new light for
the sake of doing it. And in doing so, Sally felt, the young woman had
rejuvenated the space of the old theatre. She had given a performance equal to
the actress and the pianist, if not more in her daring. Sally sat reflecting
happily on the idea that this could be so as the befuddled theatergoers trailed
out of the building. At last, she gathered her blazer and scarf in the silence
of the empty theatre and left.
Sally found the stone flight of steps to the street outside empty, the
last person having departed the theatre long before. As she thought of the
night’s dance, she recalled her own performance that she long had accepted as
polished and perfected. She felt now she might try to change it. She would make
her dance new again, as the performance tonight had been. Going down the first
steps, Sally saw her legs wander to the side with the off movement she had made
walking to the theatre. She slowed and watched her feet make two, then three of
the steps. She liked the motion for the first time. She thought it had its own
kind of grace, one she had overlooked in her self-chastisement. She took a few
more strides right. She held still and treaded back. She took a few paces down
again, watching herself carefully; without turning, she shuffled back up the
steps. She lifted her foot to make a new advance. But an idea struck her. She
raised her leg and arched it down to the stone. She descended a short way and
curved in her path. She saw her legs cross neatly before each other.
Sally reached the broad sidewalk, circled in a small loop, and bowed a
leg over the concrete. An old man in a costly blazer, advancing along the
sidewalk, stopped a short distance away and stared at Sally. His puzzled face
pleaded the question why Sally was acting so on that deserted street on a cold
night. Sally looked back at the old man but, rather than speak a word, she
curved her leg and took a bounding step to the side. Her dance was the answer to
the old man and, as she thought of it, the question the young dancer had
asked.
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