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  • Tiler Peck On Bringing ‘Turn It Out with Tiler Peck & Friends’ Back to City Center

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    Peck’s curatorial approach transforms the stage into a meeting place for genres, generations and creative sensibilities in constant dialogue. Photo: Riker Brothers

    In 2022, New York City Ballet’s beloved ballerina Tiler Peck curated a show for New York City Center’s inaugural Artists at the Center program: Turn It Out with Tiler Peck & Friends. The show received critical and audience acclaim in New York City, went on to perform at Sadler’s Wells Theatre in London (where the piece Time Spell received an Olivier Award nomination for Best New Dance Production) and then toured Peck’s home state of California. It is now returning to City Center for an encore presentation from October 16 to 19—great news for those of us who missed the popular show the first time around.

    The program includes fresh (as in, they first premiered in 2022) works of ballet, contemporary and tap dance from some of the greatest choreographers working today. It opens with the quartet The Barre Project, Blake Works II by modern ballet pioneer William Forsythe, set to music by James Blake, followed by Peck’s sextet Thousandth Orange, set to live music by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Caroline Shaw. After that is the duet Swift Arrow by San Francisco’s king of contemporary ballet, Alonzo King, with music by jazz composer Jason Moran. And closing the program is the City Center commission Time Spell, a collaboration between Peck, tap dance queen Michelle Dorrance, and Emmy-nominated contemporary choreographer Jillian Meyers, with music by Aaron Marcellus and Penelope Wendtlandt. Peck dances in all the works except her own, and the show’s all-star cast also includes fellow NYCB company members India Bradley, Chun Wai Chan, Christopher Grant, Mira Nadon, Quinn Starner, and Ryan Tomash, along with Boston Ballet principal dancer Jeffrey Cirio, dancer and So You Think You Can Dance season 14 winner Lex Ishimoto and tap dancer Byron Tittle.

    Observer recently spoke with Peck—always warm, humble and on the move—about her excitement for the show’s encore presentation, her bottomless desire to grow as an artist and her love and admiration for her friends.

    How did Turn It Out with Tiler & Friends first come together?

    I have curated other shows, but this is the only program I’ve ever created from scratch. None of these pieces existed before I asked the choreographers to make them. So Turn It Out with Tiler feels the most special to me, because it’s kind of like my little child.

    I started working on it during the pandemic. I’d always wanted to work with Bill Forsythe, and he had wanted to work with me, but we could never get our schedules together. So I called him and said, “Hi, Bill, I know everything’s, like, shut down, but would you want to work together? I know it’s not ideal.” And he was like, “When can we start?” And I was like, “How about tomorrow?” And so that’s how that piece came about. We just started working together over Zoom. We didn’t know what it would become. After a while, he said, “I think we need to bring some gentlemen in.” And so we did. After we finished The Barre Project, we released it on film so people could see it. But the first time it was ever performed live was at City Center for this show, and the only time we’ve ever done it with the original cast, the way he created it, is during this particular Turn It Out with Tiler show that we tour.

    What about the Alonzo King piece?

    It was the same thing. I called Alonzo and said, “I really want to work with you. How would you feel about creating something for me?” And he said, “Oh my gosh, I would love to.” And so we made a little bubble in San Francisco. There were just four of us in the room. And he created a pas de deux for Roman and me during that time, which has also only been seen whenever this show is done. My choreography, Thousandth Orange, began at the Vail Dance Festival, but this version we perform is very different. Time Spell was created specifically for this show and has only ever been performed in this show.

    How has it been returning to Thousandth Orange, a work you created a few years ago?

    It’s nice because I can adjust it for the dancers who are doing it now. It doesn’t have to be a museum piece. That’s one great thing about being a living choreographer—you can still make those changes!

    When you first performed the show and toured it, what responses did you get from the audience?

    I think Time Spell really transports people. When I’m in the wings listening to Penny and Aaron sing, I feel that, but I wasn’t sure how the audience would react. It’s really hard, I think, to try to mix styles without it looking like “Oh, there’s a tap dancer and there’s a ballet dancer and contemporary dancer and they’re all trying to dance together!” But to me, the seamlessness of how this is blended, you don’t even realize that you’re watching so many different forms of dance in one piece. And so many of the dancers are multitalented. Like Lex is tapping alongside Michelle Dorrance, but then doing a pas de deux with me, because he can do ballet too. A lot of people have told me Time Spell does not leave them. They don’t always understand how to explain it, but they’re so moved by it. And that’s been the case every time we’ve performed it.

    How did you go about making that piece?

    I wanted to work with Michelle, and Michelle had the idea to bring Jillian Meyers in, too. So the three of us really worked together. They’re so talented. I just helped blend the ballet into it. But everybody was super collaborative. Michelle is just… I don’t know, she’s just like the most talented person I know, and this is, I think, one of her favorite things she’s ever made.

    What excites you about returning to this program again?

    The nice thing about getting to do something more than once is that you get to dive deeper into each piece and role. And I feel like that’s what’s so beautiful about the show now—it’s really finding its roots, and everybody feels comfortable in it.

    These are the most incredible artists to be surrounded by. I think all of us love being in the room together, because we each feel like we grow by getting to work with one another. We all push each other. And we become a really tight family of people. I think that feeling comes across in the show because the works were created during a time when nobody was able to be together. This was the first thing we could do. We were in masks when we first started! And so it really has this feeling of longing, of not being with somebody, and then coming back, and the intersections that happen there. I feel like the more that we all understand the work, the richer it’s become. And because we don’t get to do it often, every time we dance together, it feels fresh.

    What’s it like dancing styles so different from what you normally do at NYCB?

    Growing up, I wasn’t a classical dancer at all. I took ballet so that my technique would be strong, but I was really a jazz contemporary dancer. So I think that’s why I feel so comfortable in these types of work. At this point in my career, I want to be pushed by choreographers, and not just physically. Alonzo really digs deep into the human side of dancing. He is kind of like a philosopher, and I was interested in growing that way as a dancer. When you’re in the studio with him, you learn so much about yourself and about dance and the world. He has this way of sharing that’s unlike any other choreographer, I think.

    And Bill is the most musical person ever, so working with him was like a dream. The way he would explain things like compressing and stretching time, it felt like I was getting a lesson on how to choreograph and dance at the same time every time we worked.

    And you’re so musical, too—that’s a great pairing!

    You know what’s funny? The one person who makes me feel not musical is Michelle. She can hear notes and beats that my ear doesn’t even go to, and I think I’m musical, so that’s why I’m always so interested in working with her. She’s constantly pushing me to hear and see and explore even further. What I love about this show is that it’s everything. It combines so many types of dance forms into one. I only wear pointe shoes for one of the pieces! It’s more than just a ballet performance. It’s an evening of dance.

    Turn It Out with Tiler Peck & Friends is at New York City Center October 16-19, 2025.

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    Tiler Peck On Bringing ‘Turn It Out with Tiler Peck & Friends’ Back to City Center

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    Caedra Scott-Flaherty

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  • Martha Graham Dance Company Explores the American Experience, Past and Present

    Martha Graham Dance Company Explores the American Experience, Past and Present

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    Anne Souder in Martha Graham’s ‘Maple Leaf Rag.’ Hibbard Nash Photography

    Martha Graham Dance Company is turning 100! Soon. In two years, to be exact. But it’s never too early to start the party, and the Company will perform American Legacies at New York City Center as part of a three-year-long centennial celebration, starting tomorrow (April 17). The program focuses on the Company’s exploration of American themes and will feature Graham classics as well as a new production of a midcentury ballet and a powerful new work by a contemporary choreographer.

    Martha Graham (1894-1991) probably needs no introduction, but here’s a quick one: She was born in Pennsylvania to strict Irish-American Presbyterians. Eventually, her family moved to California, where she discovered concert dance and studied with modern dance pioneers Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn. After performing with Denishawn and The Greenwich Village Follies, she went off on her own to create a more serious and “human” dance technique, one that was rooted in the American experience and the most basic of movements—breathing. “Contraction and release,” with its radical instance on a flexible torso, revolutionized the way dancers moved on stage.

    Graham founded her company in 1926, making it both the oldest dance company in the United States and the oldest integrated dance company in the country. She went on to create 181 ballets over nearly 70 years. Now the Company, under the leadership of Artistic Director Janet Eilber (a former principal dancer who worked with Graham for almost a decade), continues to perform the Graham works but also regularly commissions new pieces by contemporary artists. “The range of our dancers has become mind-blowingly fabulous,” Eilber told Observer. “And at the same time, these new works have brought fresh eyes to the Graham classics that are on stage with them. Because the conversation is evident… when her work is put on stage next to the top voices of today’s dance world, there’s just—it’s hard to explain, but the Graham Company is being rediscovered and appreciated in a completely new light, I think.”

    Here’s what’s on in the American Legacies program:

    Rodeo (4/17 & 4/20)

    A group of dancers in western style costumes form a circle on stage with hands linkedA group of dancers in western style costumes form a circle on stage with hands linked
    Martha Graham Dance Company in Agnes de Mille’s ‘Rodeo.’ Photo by Carla Lopez, Luque Photography

    The oldest piece on the program is also one of the newest. Rodeo was created in 1942 for the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, but the Graham Company will be performing the New York premiere of a brand-new production of the classic ballet. Rodeo was not choreographed by Graham but by her contemporary Agnes de Mille. The De Mille Working Group approached Eilber with the idea to perform the ballet with the score reorchestrated for bluegrass, and she felt this would fit right in with their plan to reexamine mid-century Americana. “We wanted to find a way to talk about the roots of American music being in the immigrant and enslaved communities,” she said. “And Rodeo is the first dance for the stage that incorporated tap dance, also coming out of the immigrant and enslaved communities.”

    When I asked what is new about this new production, Eilber said, “Everything except the choreography.” Aaron Copland’s original score, which wove in old cowboy melodies, has been reorchestrated for a six-piece bluegrass ensemble by multi-instrumentalist and composer/arranger Gabe Witcher, returning the music back to its roots. The new jewel-toned costumes designed by Oana Botez are, according to Eilber, “taken to a heightened reality” and “are more like a dream. A rose-colored glasses memory of the era.” And the original theatrical sets have been swapped out for projections by designer extraordinaire Beowulf Boritt. All these changes were made to expand the conversation about this iconic work while staying true to de Mille’s “humorous and heartfelt story about a young, independent misfit searching for love.”

    We the People (4/17, 4/19, & 4/20)

    The other New York premiere on the program is Jamar Roberts’ We the People (2024), commissioned as a companion piece to the new production of Rodeo. A 21st-century work of Americana, if you will. Roberts danced with Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater for many years and was the Resident Choreographer there from 2019 to 2022. His style is fast and hard-hitting, and the Company is clearly thrilled to take it on. (I saw an excerpt of the piece at the 92NY in March, and can’t wait to see the rest.) The music is by Grammy Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Rhiannon Giddens, inspired by songs from her latest album, You’re the One.

    We the People, like its 20th-century companion piece, is rooted in the social-political atmosphere of the day. While Rodeo is optimistic and romantic—an idealized view of the country made with an international cast during a World War—Roberts’ piece is about protest and power. “You take a risk when you commission something and don’t know what you’re going to get,” Eilber told me. “But it is exactly, and beyond, what I had hoped when we started talking about a companion piece.”

    Maple Leaf Rag (4/17 & 4/18)

    Two dancers in distinctive yellow costumes strike a difficult pose in which the man is holding the woman aloft sidewaysTwo dancers in distinctive yellow costumes strike a difficult pose in which the man is holding the woman aloft sideways
    Xin Ying and Lloyd Knight in ‘Maple Leaf Rag.’ Hibbard Nash Photography

    Maple Leaf Rag (1990) was Graham’s last complete work, made when she was 96. If that’s not reason enough to see it, get this: it’s funny! “In it, she makes fun of her own serious, angsty reputation,” Eilber explained, “which is, I think, wonderful for your last ballet to look back and make a joke.” A tribute to the choreographic muse, it harkens back to the days when the strain of creating in the early ‘30s was just too much for her, so she would ask her pianist (and mentor and lover Louis Horst) to play something to break the mood. The story goes, she would always ask for Scott Joplin’s “Maple Leaf Rag.”

    The score is a delight, the original costumes by fashion designer Calvin Klein are lovely, and the piece is always an audience favorite.

    The Rite of Spring (4/18 & 4/19)

    A male dancer in black dance briefs lifts a female dancer in a white dress with a black beltA male dancer in black dance briefs lifts a female dancer in a white dress with a black belt
    Xin Ying and Lorenzo Pagano in Martha Graham’s ‘The Right of Spring.’ Hubbard Nash Photography

    I’ve written before about how much I love The Rite of Spring in all its iterations, and Graham’s 1984 version is no exception. Graham danced as the Chosen One in the first American production of the work choreographed by Léonide Massine and conducted by Leopold Stokowski in 1930. She knew the work inside and out. But it wasn’t until 50 years later that she took on the story of ritual and rebirth as a choreographer.

    Edward T. Morris’ set is a minimalist version of its original (which was lost), and Pilar Limosner’s costumes are also updated. The Shaman, for instance, no longer wears a bright green unitard.

    The Rite of Spring is always worth seeing, especially when Igor Stravinsky’s music is played live (which it will be, as will the music for all the Graham classics, by The New School’s Mannes Orchestra under the direction of David Hayes).

    Appalachian Spring (4/19)

    It would be impossible to create a Graham program about Americana without including her celebrated masterwork Appalachian Spring (1944). Like Rodeo, the narrative ballet shines a patriotic light on American culture and the great frontier. Like Rodeo, it is romantic and hopeful. And like Rodeo, the score was written by Aaron Copland. This score later won the Pulitzer Prize for music and includes the now-unmistakable Shaker hymn “Simple Gifts.” The original set is by the sculptor, and Graham’s longtime collaborator, Isamu Noguchi.

    CAVE (4/20)

    Closing out the program is another commissioned work: Israeli-born and UK-based choreographer Hofesh Shechter’s CAVE (2022), presented in association with Hofesh Shechter Company, with an electronic score by Shechter and the German duo Âme.

    The piece grew from a desire to bring the techno club scene to the proscenium stage to create a sort of Rave-style event. “It’s inspired by the basic human urge to move to the beat,” Eilber said. “Just infectious primal moves. It’s like a big dance party. And because it was invented towards the end of the pandemic, and people had not been able to dance together… not been able to sweat and breathe on each other in a dance club, so it’s very cathartic. Audiences get very involved vocally, if not physically. It’s a great closer for our last night.”

    When I asked Eilber what she thought Graham would think of the program, of her classic works in conversation with those of de Mille, Roberts and Shechter, she smiled up at the ceiling. “Martha really was all about change, right? She loved to change. She looked for change. She tried to figure out what was going to happen next so she could do it first. I think she’d be thrilled that all of this was blossoming out of the essential human truths she was after back in the day.”

    Performances of American Legacies will take place Wednesday, April 17 at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, April 18 at 7 p.m. (Gala), and Friday and Saturday, April 19-20, at 7:30 p.m. at New York City Center.

    Martha Graham Dance Company Explores the American Experience, Past and Present

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    Caedra Scott-Flaherty

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  • Review: Don’t Sleep on Splendiferous Sutton Foster in ‘Once Upon a Mattress’

    Review: Don’t Sleep on Splendiferous Sutton Foster in ‘Once Upon a Mattress’

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    Sutton Foster in Once Upon a Mattress. Joan Marcus

    Once Upon a Mattress | 2hrs 15mins. One intermission. | New York City Center | 131 West 55th Street | 212-581-1212

    After suffering through Once Upon a One More Time last summer, I concluded that musicals about princesses had become a royal bore; no more singing and dancing tiaras for me, please. And yet Sutton Foster’s full-body comic onslaught as Winnifred the Woebegone in Once Upon a Mattress has restored my fealty to throne. Playing her first stage princess since the ogre-besotted Fiona in 2008’s Shrek, Foster musters every talented inch of her limber frame, rubber face, and iron lungs to generate waves of zany ecstasy in this delightful concert version for City Center Encores!

    An urbane riff on Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Princess and the Pea,” Mattress was an early pioneer of the musical fractured fairytale in 1959, decades before composer Mary Rodgers’ lifelong buddy Stephen Sondheim had a go at the Grimms with Into the Woods. Not so coincidentally, the production is helmed by Encores! artistic director Lear de Bessonet, who staged the luminous revival of Woods that transferred to a hot-ticket Broadway run. It’s unclear if the same trajectory awaits Mattress, a lightweight goof with an old-fashioned score that nevertheless has a role any comic diva would die for.

    Sutton Foster and Michael Urie (center) in Once Upon a Mattress. Joan Marcus

    Or dive for: Winnifred throws herself into a moat and swims to the castle in search of her prince, sight unseen. When Foster is pulled up onto the stage, she is a dripping vision in algae: an eel down her dress, an enraged beaver tangled in her bun. The sort of gal folks used to call a tomboy, Winnifred is exuberantly uncultured and has boundary issues: in her intro tune, “Shy,” she bellow the title word, bowling everyone over. It’s right there in her name; half of her is soft and feminine: Winnie. The other half is, well, Fred. She can lift weights, sing like a nightingale and chug gallons of ale. Even with today’s hypersensitivities, the material’s flipping of gender stereotypes comes across as cute, not cringe. Mary Rodgers’ music doesn’t reinvent the swooning, jazz-inflected style she inherited from her father, Richard, but combined with Marshall Barer’s slyly camp lyrics, the score carries a gently subversive charge.

    Part of the freshness is due to strategic book rewrites by Amy Sherman-Palladino (The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel), who sharpens the feminist jabs and underscores the vanity and thickness of the men. One of the thickest is Sir Harry (Cheyenne Jackson), a clueless knight whose union with the pregnant Lady Larken (Nikki Renée Daniels) is held up by ridiculous trials devised by the scheming Queen Aggravain (Harriet Harris) to delay marriage for her coddled son, Prince Dauntless (Michael Urie). When Winnifred enters the picture, the wicked monarch devises an impossible test: she plants a pea under 20 downy mattresses and will deny Winnifred’s royal status if she fails to detect the intruding legume.

    Harriet Harris and Francis Jue in Once Upon a Mattress. Joan Marcus

    As she did with Into the Woods, De Bessonet maintains a charming balance between earnestness and ironic sauciness in this no-frills but still attractive staging (economical and colorful sets by David Zinn and mock-medieval frocks by Andrea Hood). Her ensemble (a well-oiled machine after only ten days of rehearsal) is an embarrassment of riches: Daniels and Jackson’s voices blend lusciously on their romantic duets; as a petulant man-boy and embittered dragon lady, respectively, Urie and Harris mug with flamboyant glee; J. Harrison Ghee’s narrating Jester in glitter lipstick and fuscia garb lends a genderfluid vibe; and, as the kindly, mute King, David Patrick Kelly expresses much with his powerful, compact frame. 

    So Foster isn’t alone up there, but it is hard to notice anyone else when Winnifred is warbling tenderly about “The Swamps of Home” or struggling to find a comfy spot on her mountain of bedding through an increasingly agitated series of contortions. A star since she Charlestoned into Broadway lovers’ hearts some 22 years ago in Thoroughly Modern Millie, Foster is the perfect physical comedian and singer to revivify the role that made Carol Burnett famous. Foster doesn’t need the career boost; if Mattress does extend in a bigger venue, she already has her next gig: baking people into meat pies over at Sweeney Todd

    Buy Tickets Here 

    Review: Don’t Sleep on Splendiferous Sutton Foster in ‘Once Upon a Mattress’



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    David Cote

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