Alexandra Posted January 21, 2004 Share Posted January 21, 2004 Open call -- I'm writing an article for the Dance Critics Association newsletter called "Dancing with Wild Abandon, The Ten Phrases Critics Should Never Use." I'm asking writers as well as readers to offer your favorite, er, least favorite phrases. What are your favorite, er, un-favorite, examples? If your "entry" is selected, I'll contact you and see if you want your name used. I'll be glad to give you credit, or you may remain anonymous. (Real name, not screen name) Thanking you in advance, and eagerly waiting your responses..... Link to comment
Herman Stevens Posted January 21, 2004 Share Posted January 21, 2004 critical shortcuts She became a swan / village maiden / mechanical doll / princess / sacrificial virgin. Upside: you don't have to define the dancing. Downside: doesn't mean a thing. Herman Link to comment
Alexandra Posted January 21, 2004 Author Share Posted January 21, 2004 Yes, that's a good one. Thank you! It's handy, though. sigh. ("He WAS Hamlet.") Your point about "critical shortcuts" is a good one, too, Herman. Sometimes they're taken because the critic can't write about the dancing, and sometimes because you have only 250 words to write about 4 casts, or 4 new ballets. I've often thought we should do what American real estate ads do -- 4 rms riv vu (4 rooms, river view) is one of those cliches. Sat mat La S O/O 32fs not. (On Saturday Matinee, La Sublimova as Odette/Odile did not attempt the 32 fouettes.) Still doesn't tell you what she did do, but it's handy Link to comment
Ari Posted January 21, 2004 Share Posted January 21, 2004 In the early days of Ballet Review, Arlene Croce wrote a very funny article about bad dance criticism that included a list of hackneyed phrases, such as "Markova is Giselle." She said something like, "Markova is Markova. What the critic probably means is that he was moved." Another chestnut she singled out was, "There is only one [name of dancer]!" She quoted a review that exclaimed, "There is only one Tallchief!" and pointed out that there were in fact two (Maria and Marjorie). Link to comment
Farrell Fan Posted January 21, 2004 Share Posted January 21, 2004 "By contemporary standards, the plot is feeble and far-fetched. Yet the ballet has held the stage for well over a century." Ms. Assoluta was unaccountably off-form. "The revival of "Harlequinade" brings to mind Todd Bolender's unjustly neglected "Commedia Balletica" from 1945." "Mr. Diddly Cool's 'Hip Hop Mish Mash' is an instant classic!" Link to comment
Alexandra Posted January 21, 2004 Author Share Posted January 21, 2004 These are great! Keep 'em coming, folks! You'll reform the field Link to comment
perky Posted January 21, 2004 Share Posted January 21, 2004 Here's some: "He dances with a panther-like grace" Usually applies to a male dancer(Nureyev, Acosta) I've even seen "pantherine" Is that a word? "He/She commanded the stage" "He/She danced as if they were composing the music with thier body" Huh!! :shrug: Link to comment
Mel Johnson Posted January 21, 2004 Share Posted January 21, 2004 "Pantherine" is indeed a word. So is "amplitude". But it is NOT an exact synonym for "ampleness", as most dance critics make it. Link to comment
Nanatchka Posted January 22, 2004 Share Posted January 22, 2004 You betcha "pantherine" is a word. Have you been reading me? I use it when I describe Stephen Petronio. (So shoot me.) I love that word. It sounds so, well, panther-like. (Guilty, guilty, guilty.) Not that there aren't things I'd like to see retired: haunting heart-stopping And maybe we should take "iconic" out of circulation for a while. I remember when that word was launched--by Joan Acocella, as I tracked it--and it was fun to watch it make the rounds. The theater critic Richard Gilman wrote a whole essay on this topic in the 1970s. I will try to find it. (He hated "haunting." He said no one was ever haunted by a performance.) He liked to make his students write without adjectives. It makes for a more, well, pantherine prose. (Don't you just hate it when people call prose "muscular?") I now regard adjectives the same way I do chocolate. Yummy. I just love them. Which reminds me of another word I could do without, unless it is Deborah Jowitt writing. She can write about "luscious thighs" all she wants. Everyone else should stop. Let's just call a moratorium on all food adjectives applied to dancers. It implies that the writer 1)needs a life 2) is hungry. Mel, I think people use "amplitude" rather than "ampleness" because they want to make it quite clear they are writing about a movement quality, and not a plumpness quality. I don't know why the words have different connotations to that effect, but they do. About the body playing the music, or writing to that effect: it is an attempt to describe the experience known as "synesthesia," or a confusion of the senses, which is, when not produced by neurological problems but by a work of art, a magical sensation. You look at a dance--for instance, the concentric circles in Mark Morris's L'Allegro--and you feel as if the movement is producing the music. So your ears see, and your eyes hear. Balanchine was very fond of this notion. Link to comment
Farrell Fan Posted January 22, 2004 Share Posted January 22, 2004 This is off-topic, except that for me it is always the topic: Maurice Bejart said of Suzanne Farrell: "She's like a violin; the music comes out from her body." Link to comment
tempusfugit Posted January 22, 2004 Share Posted January 22, 2004 She can write about "luscious thighs" all she wants. Everyone else should stop. Let's just call a moratorium on all food adjectives applied to dancers. It implies that the writer 1)needs a life 2) is hungry.Nanatchka, I'm still laughing. Hilarious! of course, I might say "and just what's wrong with being hungry?" it might also be construed to imply that the writer 3) was haunted by the dancer's luscious amplitude.... Yes. Balanchine used to say "see the music, hear the dance...." Link to comment
Mel Johnson Posted January 22, 2004 Share Posted January 22, 2004 "The amplitude of her port de bras...." I have a picture of a sine wave on an oscilloscope. Not much good, except if you're doing "The Dying Swan". Since 1960, I think I've seen "amplitude" used correctly and effectively in dance criticism maybe three times. Link to comment
carbro Posted January 22, 2004 Share Posted January 22, 2004 Yes, Amplitude in Plentitude. So sue me! I couldn't resist. Link to comment
djb Posted January 22, 2004 Share Posted January 22, 2004 Anything that "defies description." Someone recently emailed me the results of winners of last year's Bulwer-Lytton contest (run by the English Dept. of San Jose State University) for the worst first line of a bad novel. Here's #8: "With a curvaceous figure that Venus would have envied, a tanned, unblemished oval face framed with lustrous thick brown hair, deep azure-blue eyes fringed with long black lashes, perfect teeth that vied for competition, and a small straight nose, Marilee had a beauty that defied description." Link to comment
Paul Parish Posted January 22, 2004 Share Posted January 22, 2004 posh stuff, DJB -- keep it coming.. By the way, it wa geat to meet you at hte Arthur Mitchell talk, about 90 minutes ago now.. Wonder what his life would have been like if he'd taken the scholarship to Bennington? About these locutions, Nanatchka, I[m with you -- pantherine is a major category with me. I once described Frankie manning, the great exhibition-Lindy dancer, as pantherine-- he not only was the first swing dancer to throw his partner over his back, he developed a deep-bent stance, with the body sloping at about a 50 degree angle and hte knees in almost perpetual fondu, that not only suited his heroic figure but gave hte dance a new sleek look, very cat-like Ugly phrases I have used: supremely musical (yuck), that's the one I hated the most when I read it. weird locutions I can not forswear: I reserve the right to use hte adverb "unmisunderstandably" when hte situation calls for it. I first heard it when at a master-class, when Karl-Ulrich Schnabelk assured a pianist at Mills College that if he used this fingering, he would play hte phrase unmisunderstandably. ("The smallest steps on pointe can register from the back of hte house. La Optima phrased the sylphide's hesitations and sudden return of confidence unmisunderstandably.") Link to comment
carbro Posted January 22, 2004 Share Posted January 22, 2004 Unmisunderstably (or as an adjective, unmisunderstandable) is a great word. What is the name for a word that describes its own meaning? I'm sure Mel knows. I recently called Carla Korbes "untakeyoureyesoffable." The problem is, she usually is just that, but I can't use the word again for the next eight or 10 years. :shrug: Oh, and for more examples like the one cited by djb, here's a slew: Bulwer-Lytton results. Link to comment
sandik Posted January 22, 2004 Share Posted January 22, 2004 "Emerging" Especially "emerging choreographer." I'm guilty, I've used it, and it does indeed describe a particular point in someone's career, but it is so overused right now that I'm trying to excise it from my vocabulary. It just needs a rest, maybe a trip to the beach and a nice nap, and then it can come back. I don't think I'm going to be able to use "pantherine," but I do love reading it. Link to comment
Alexandra Posted January 22, 2004 Author Share Posted January 22, 2004 Good one, sandi -- not a cliche (yet) but you've inspired me. Perhaps we could have "subsiding" choreographers? "This is the 19th ballet Mr. Drekov, one of our pre-eminent subsiding choreographers, has created for the National Ballet of Dry Gulch, and what can one say ...." Link to comment
Paul Parish Posted January 23, 2004 Share Posted January 23, 2004 Choura, I'm totally craving your appellations.... Drekov is tip-top.... By the way, Isn't today Mr Balanchine's 100th birthday? Mr Balanchine's 100th birthday today Happy Birthday, Mr B..... Link to comment
Mel Johnson Posted January 23, 2004 Share Posted January 23, 2004 This is not about a cliché so much as it is about a style: That of the writer who has just been given a new Thesaurus and can't wait to try it out. The result is often similar to the style settled by Dr. Thomas Holley Chivers of Decatur, Georgia, who had found a rhyming dictionary, and committed the unforgettable "Rosalie Lee": Many mellow Cydonian suckets Sweet apples, anthosmial, divine, From the ruby-rimmed berylline buckets Star-gemmed, lily-shaped, hyaline; Like the sweet golden goblet found growing On the wild emerald cucumber-tree, Rich, brilliant, like chrysoprase glowing Was my beautiful Rosalie Lee. Annabel's sister, no doubt. Of Chivers, it was said that "Poe finished the ruin of him begun by Shelley." Actually, Chivers knew Poe and started as his friend, but the latter soon was suing him for plagiarism, giving him a wholly undeserved notoriety. It was at about the line "berylline buckets" that this writer did a Danny Thomas "spit take" with his coffee. Link to comment
Alexandra Posted January 25, 2004 Author Share Posted January 25, 2004 djb, I love your bad novel example. I have one that's similar to "defies description," the homier "you had to be there." Link to comment
Leigh Witchel Posted January 25, 2004 Share Posted January 25, 2004 <looking at my own articles> pantherine. amplitude. iconic. Yup. Guilty as charged. Link to comment
djb Posted January 25, 2004 Share Posted January 25, 2004 "You had to be there," "defies description" and "words are insufficient" could all be better expressed as "I can't write." Link to comment
cargill Posted January 25, 2004 Share Posted January 25, 2004 Well, I am just sitting down to write a review of Double Feature, and "defies description" pretty much sums it up! As for cliches, I am sure I have used them all--I actually like amplitude. Three-dimensional is one I have used, which really doesn't mean much, since no one is really two dimensional (though choreography can be!). Link to comment
Thalictum Posted January 26, 2004 Share Posted January 26, 2004 What's wrong with amplitude? What we have to guard against is overuse. Link to comment
Recommended Posts