
The world being what it is, one must make the case for a hallelujah. The events of Sept. 11 and the subsequent permanent war on terrorism, the bloody downward spiral of the Palestinian/Israeli conflict and recent revelations concerning sexual misconduct in the Catholic Church: Each has prompted worldwide grief. Together, they might characterize a time more suited to qinah, the Hebrew songs of lamentation, than hallelujah.
Itโs interesting, then, that Liz Lermanโs Hallelujah Project, created through a two-year odyssey of extended residencies and workshops in 18 cities across the country, found its beginning in a work of lamentation. The piece visits Raleigh this weekend, at North Carolina Stateโs Stewart Theatre.
Starting with a groundbreaking two-year residency in the shipyards of Portsmouth, N.H., Lermanโs group has created dance by moving into a community and learning its joys and concerns firsthand. The art thatโs come out of these projects speaks with authenticity to the hostsโ hometown truths.
In 1997, Lermanโs company had just completed Shehechianu, a dance about the effects of personal and group trauma on social history and identity. โIt was grim,โ Lerman says. But in a panel discussion after the final performance, a woman from the audience spoke up. โโIโm tired of holding my breath, waiting to celebrate until everything is OK. Iโm going to start now,’โ Lerman recalls her saying. โThat really was the turning point for me.โ
The master choreographer resolved to look for expressions of joyโways by which people are able to connect somehow to something positive. After two years of planning, Lerman and the members of her Dance Exchange emerged from the studio and started asking people what they found to praise in their lives.
It was not the easiest work to do, personally or professionally. โPraise was a whole new idea to me,โ Lerman says. โI think Iโm a generous person, but the idea of praising a deity is something that still doesnโt come naturally to me.โ
She also faced some resistance from patrons unconvinced about the gravitasโor the postmodernityโof joy. โWe had several high-placed art people say, โCome back to us when this projectโs over with, because itโs too do-goody for us.’โ Lerman says. โThereโs the perception that anything about joy must be too feel-good for it to be really good art.โ
But thatโs not been Lermanโs experience with the Hallelujah Project, a work which evokes a full range of emotions. โWhat invariably comes up for people, right from the get-go, are those elements from the other side,โ she says. โYou canโt have one without the other.โ
Think about it. Gratitude implies deliverance: relief after pain, love after loneliness, joy at the end of depression or loss. True joy, true praise is not an easy or a cheap emotion. Itโs a response to something profound.
โThe very first time we tested the idea we were in Memphis,โ Lerman recalls. โAnd this little kid said, โMy mom has married her boyfriend.โ Of course you could hear the joy in that. But you could also hear what else was going on underneathโwhat kind of tension he was living in before the marriage. Almost all of the โHallelujahsโ have allowed people to live in a spectrum of emotions.โ
Although they were created in different places, the dances share common themes: constancy in the midst of change, fertile fields, beauty and disorder, paradise lost and found.
The projectโs final residencies are now culminating in performances in four cities in North Carolina. Asheboroโs residency came to a close last weekend with a work in praise of stone and spirit. The piece created in Boone praises โmountain mixes,โ the volatile combination of mountain folkways and valley influences in a performance on April 27 at Appalachian State University. Greensboroโs yet-untitled work debuts on June 29โa collaboration between Native Americans and relocated refugees from Afghanistan, the Sudan, Ghana and Kosovo. That performance is the last before a summarizing, nationwide project โfestivalโ in July in College Park, Md.
Raleighโs contribution is an addition to an existing work, โIn Praise of Animals and Their Humans,โ a collaboration with local animal lovers, pet owners, and folks from N.C. Stateโs School of Veterinary Medicine and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
Why praise animals? Because domestication goes both ways, says Michele Pearson, Lermanโs North Carolina project director. โThatโs the key to me. What is it that animals can elicit in people that often is hard for people to elicit in other people?โ
She spins the tale of an old man who is โjust nastyโ to people. โBut when he holds that cat, and pets it and talks to it in a sweet little whisper voice, I see my grandfather differently,โ Pearson says. โI can talk to him when heโs holding Sam Cat in a way I canโt when heโs not.โ
Before they start their summer tour of Chicago, Berlin, St. Louis or Rio de Janeiro, you can catch them this weekend in Durham. Theyโre one of the countryโs premier tap dance groups. Theyโre also your children: Thirty kids from all over the area, ranging in age from 6 to 18.
And boy, can they dance.
Perhaps itโs the relative lack of local show dates that keeps the North Carolina Youth Tap Ensemble below the radar on the regional scene. Thankfully, they donโt have the same problem at national festivals devoted to that terpsichorean mix of percussion, jazz and movement. In recent years, their annual appearances at the St. Louis Tap Festival and the Chicago Human Rhythm Project have led to invitations abroadโHelsinki, Vienna, repeat trips to Rio, Russia, and this summer, Berlin. The group is now actively looking into professional management to take their show even further on the road.
Catch them while you canโwith guest host Cholly Atkins of Motown fameโat the Carolina Theater, April 20 at 7 p.m., and April 21 at 2 p.m.
Poet Jaki Shelton Green didnโt set out to write a poem about breast cancer. โIt was just a poem that literally came to her in the middle of the night,โ says Carol Childs, choreographer for 2 Near the Edge. โShe kept getting up all night long, and it just kept coming. Then a friend of hers who had had breast cancer read it, and felt strongly that thatโs what itโs about.โ
That long night grew into a collaboration between Green, Childs and L. D. Burris, the second member of the dance groupโs choreography team. The result is Bring Me Your Breasts, a work honoring cancer survivors and victims, which premieres Saturday afternoon at the new Doris Duke Center in Duke Gardens on the universityโs West Campus.
Starting from a seed dance in the Duke dance programโs December concert, the piece has expanded into what Childs calls a work about โwhat breasts are to us as women and what role they play in our lives.โ
John Hanks provides the music, while dancers Amy Eason, Valarie Samulski, Jessi Knight Walker and Maria Walsh-Laudati join Burris and Childs onstage. 


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