Bebe Miller

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Six women of all ages dance in Bebe Miller's Necessary Beauty at the Wexner Center for the Arts on October 1, 2008: Yen-Fang Yu, Bebe Miller, Cynthia Oliver, and Kathleen Hermesdorf, standing; and Kristina Isabelle and Angie Hauser, sitting.[1]

Bebe Miller is an American choreographer, dancer and director.

Biography

Daughter of an elementary school teacher and a ship steward, Bebe Miller was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1950. She was raised in a public housing project in the Red Hook Neighborhood. When Miller was five years old she began to take modern dance classes due to the fact her mother had to take exercise classes for arthritis. When Miller was thirteen she took ballet classes at a studio in Carnegie Hall in Manhattan. Miller stopped attending because she quoted she, "didn't fit in," and she also states "I was intimidated." After high school Miller was educated at Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana. She majored in Art (B.A., 1971). After earning her bachelor's degree she moved back to New York and waitressed while she lived with her boyfriend for the first time. Later, she attended Ohio State University after receiving a fellowship from them.(M.A., 1975). After completing her master's degree, she danced for Nina Weiner and Dancers company for six years. In 1981 Miller launched her own dance company ("Miller"). Commissioned performances of selected original works include The Habit of Attraction, 1987, Thick Sleep, 1989, Rain, 1989, Allies, 1989, and The Hendrix Project, 1991. Commissioned performance of collaborative work, The Hidden Boy: Incidents from a Stressed Memory, 1991.

Influences on Modern Dance

Miller had focused a lot on the relationship between dancers. She focused mainly on the way that male and female relationships had developed. Miller also liked her dancers to work "equally" with one another, despite their gender. Miller also used motion capture technology to discover new choices of movement as she called it. Miller also uses video projections which add a sense of visual energy. As stated in an article written by Joseph Carman, "When Bebe Miller launches into her solo, Rhythm Studies, she may be creating a new genre of dance: black urban flamenco. Stamping on the floor, beating on a set of drums, and then venting her anxieties through words and gestures, she reaches for a primal place that could only be accessed by a woman of vast experience" (Carman).

Life's Work

Bebe Miller's dances subtly reflect her experiences both as a black woman in America and as a member of the black community. "If you look closely, it's there. We all do intensely personal work, not of 'the black experience,' but definitely of the black experience," Miller wryly told the British Dance Theatre Journal in 1987 when she performed in London with other black artists on a showcase tour called Parallels in Black. Increasingly, Miller's modern dance pieces—such as her solo, Rain, which she has described as a "black woman's return to earth," and The Hendrix Project, her celebration of the 1960s rock guitarist Jimi Hendrix's music—show her sense of belonging to a particular community.

Yet Miller maintains that she does not want to sacrifice art to overt political or racial symbolism, and this opinion has earned her both praise and criticism from reviewers and others. Generally, she prefers to emphasize the universal quality of her work, which, she has said, is really about all people and their relationships with one another. "Everyone realizes that the continuity of a group depends on its inner balance, maybe even a reliance on each other, even though it's not necessarily a comfortable place," she told free-lance writer Craig Bromberg in the Los Angeles Times when discussing her 1989 piece, Allies, which concerns the way people instinctively form alliances to ensure their survival.

At a time when black artists are searching for new ways to express independent viewpoints, Miller has managed to remain true to her personal artistic vision while reaching a wide range of audiences. She moves between the parallel worlds of art and the black community, as well as among white and black communities in America. Miller has choreographed a series of physically demanding and emotionally insightful works that have received recognition both in the United States and abroad. Since forming her multicultural New York City-based company in 1984, she has worked on a variety of dance projects, including solos and collaborations with different types of artists.

Los Angeles Times dance critic Lewis Segal described Miller as "part of the generation of postmodern choreographers who fuse a minimalist sense of movement process with the expressive priorities of European dance-theater." He characterized Miller's choreography as "distinctly contemporary in its incorporation of everything from gymnastically daring contact improvisation to pedestrian motion to the disarmingly elegant pointed toe." And Washington Post contributor Pamela Sommers observed: "Miller's stuff comes directly from life experience; there's as much of the street here as the studio."

The daughter of an elementary school teacher and a ship steward, Bebe Miller was born in September 1950 and grew up in the urban Red Hook housing projects along the waterfront in South Brooklyn, New York. She began dancing at the age of five and, as she related to Dance Magazine contributing editor Elizabeth Zimmer, it happened almost by accident. Her mother, she said, "had arthritis. She found [adult dance] classes at [Manhattan's] Henry Street Settlement and took all of us on Saturdays for years." The young Miller received creative dance instruction from the "innovative" Murray Louis who, along with Alwin Nikolais, taught children's dance classes there at the time.

When Miller was 13, she decided to try the more traditional dance form of ballet. She commuted from Brooklyn to New York City where she took ballet classes at Carnegie Hall's studios for several months. "I was intimidated, so I stopped, " she told Dance Magazine. Miller resumed taking modern dance when she was twenty and studied fine arts at Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana. After graduating from Earlham in 1971, she moved back to New York, got a job as a waitress, and continued studying dance, this time at the Nikolais studio. She decided to attend graduate school at Ohio State University in Columbus after being awarded a fellowship to study and later to teach there, and she departed with a master's degree in dance in 1975.

Two years later Miller joined the modern dance company of Nina Wiener, who had studied with noted choreographer Alvin Ailey and had been a member of the individualistic modern dancer Twyla Tharp's company. Miller performed with Wiener's company for six years, in New York and elsewhere. "Nina made me see how much fun [dance technique] could be; she gave me an appetite for making steps," Miller told Dance Magazine. In a profile of Miller for the Brooklyn Academy of Music's publication On the Next Wave, performing arts writer Robert Sandla asserted that even during Miller's early performances, she "was the dancer you watched; quietly intense, wildly imaginative, with quirky musicality, implosive energy, and bold power kept on a very short leash."

In addition to performing with Wiener, Miller devoted time to making up her own dances. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, she began performing her own small group pieces and solos downtown in New York City at studios or theater workshops devoted to developing modern dance choreographers. Though she was impressed with Wiener's artistic direction, she wanted to strike out on her own. She left Wiener's company in 1982 and formed her own two years later.

Although Miller has declined to discuss her private life, her work has always been highly personal. Several of her early dances underscore the difficulty of living in New York. A 1984 dance, Trapped in Queens, recreates the mood of the city streets. While others do not stress a black perspective in particular, black influences clearly come through, often in the accompanying music and verse. Miller performed a 1981 work, Jammin', to reggae music, and a 1986 piece, Heart, Heart, to gospel recitation. Later, she focused on the shifting nature of relationships between men and women. When describing Two, Miller's collaborative duet with dancer Ralph Lemon, Attitude contributor Cynthia S. West observed how Miller and Lemon brought out this theme--"he extended a hand, she reached for it, and plunged violently sideward. When he gestured again, she, trusting one more time, was supported and swept away."

In the mid-1980s Miller and her dancers received more exposure through increased touring throughout the United States. Several of Miller's works, including Two and Spending Time Doing Things, a solo danced to a version of the composer Duke Ellington's song, "In My Solitude," won choreography fellowships and awards. Miller was also commissioned and invited to perform new works in the city and around the country. During this time she expanded her scope to include working with writers, set designers, and visual artists, and she incorporated written text into her pieces. Miller's blending of these elements into her dances helped her shape what Attitude has called her "mesmerizing eclectic style."

In 1987 Miller was commissioned by the acclaimed Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensemble and other dance companies to create new works. Her existing work was performed by a dance company in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. During that year and the next, Miller choreographed a series of dances, including the Habit of Attraction. Segal observed that The Habit of Attraction simultaneously examines "two stormy love relationships, suggesting why one broke apart and one cohered, but focusing most of all on the electric interplay between participants: high-risk partnering of devastating intensity."

In 1989, as a counterbalance to what she called the "sense of antagonism and drama" in The Habit of Attraction, Miller choreographed Allies, a 35-minute piece commissioned in part by New York's Brooklyn Academy of Music. Allies signified a career breakthrough for Miller because it was her first appearance at the Academy's Next Wave festival. It was also produced on a bigger scale than her previous pieces. Though some critics considered Allies too long, others praised Miller's choreography and use of an appropriate set—which included underwater pictures of both sexes and emphasized her interest in human interaction. Miller has described the piece as being about recognizing one's friends and one's enemies and yet finding ways of living together. "I feel that we do, as human beings, figure out how to make things work," she remarked to Joan Acocella in 7 Days. "That's what I wanted to look at: what kinds of compromises we make, what reconciliations."

With Allies Miller danced a solo called Rain, which received more favorable reviews than Allies for its innovative movement: Acocella described how Miller, wearing a red velvet dress, lay on her back and crawled feet first onto a carpet made of real grass and earth. While critics generally viewed Rain as a blend of Miller's personal vision with social commentary on everything from the environment to African liberation—symbolically, the colors in the piece were black, red, and green—Miller has said that Rain is more of a spiritual journey to the interior than a search for roots. As she told Bromberg, "You're not left with the fact of blackness but the fact of me. And I think that has to do with where I'm going. And I might be going there because of my blackness and my femaleness. But it's a place everybody can go."

When she was rehearsing Allies, Miller was already thinking about putting together a piece using the music of Jimi Hendrix. While Miller has said that she was inspired by Hendrix's music, she also admits being influenced by the spiritual legacy of the 1960s and urgency of social issues in the 1990s. "There are many pressing issues which are being virtually ignored," she told Sandla. "I feel my dancing needs to reflect [them] in some way--without handing out flyers. Maybe that's why Hendrix feels right just now." In 1991 she and her company performed The Hendrix Project in Los Angeles and San Francisco in a program titled Black Choreographers Moving Towards the 21st Century, before traveling on to New York and Europe.

The Hendrix Project was interpreted as political by some critics because Miller used Hendrix's controversial arrangement of "The Star Spangled Banner" and danced on a disordered black and white game board, which San Francisco Chronicle critic Marilyn Tucker suggested was a "road map" of America. However, Rita Felciano, another San Francisco-based writer, observed in High Performance that while Miller's piece "was boiling with fierce dancing" it also had "a curiously playful side to it ... as if looking back at Hendrix, Miller understood his daring, rage and anxiety but could not fully identify with it." Other critics admired the energy in the piece, as well as its style and form. Segal, for instance, observed: "From Miller's opening solo to the final duet ... The Hendrix Project plunged deep and flew high, with constant, supercharged shifts in level, direction, scale and impetus."

During 1992 Miller began exploring the possibility of making a broadcast version of The Hendrix Project for television. In addition, she was commissioned for a new work by the Boston Ballet, and her own company appeared at festivals in Austria and Hungary. Clearly, Miller has come a long way from performing in small, avant-garde theaters to emerging as a leading independent black choreographer. Arlene Croce, writing in the New Yorker, deemed Miller's work "the most promising of the rising generation" with a "movement palette broad enough for her to shift styles ... with no loss of force."

Miller is likely to continue to have a major impact on the dance world during the 1990s and no doubt will leave her mark in dance history, along with other black women modern dance choreographers, including Pearl Primus and Katherine Dunham. "I'm really trying to find new markers with each piece, to observe what worked in one that might improve the next," Miller told Sandla. "I would not say that building a career as an independent choreographer has been easy, but I don't think it's been as hard for me as it's been for some. Looking back ... I think that maybe, just maybe, I've gotten somewhere."

Awards

Creative Artists Public Service Fellowship, 1984, for choreography; New York Foundation for the Arts Choreographer's Fellowship, 1984 and 1991; National Endowment for the Arts Choreographer's Fellowship, 1985, 1986, 1987, and 1988; New York Dance and Performance Award ("Bessie") for choreography, 1986 and 1987; American Choreographer Award and John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, both 1988; Dewar's Young Artists Recognition Award, 1990. In 2010 Miller was named a Fellow by United States Artists.[2] In 2012 Miller was awarded a Doris Duke Artist award.[3]

References

  • Attitude, January–April 1987.
  • Carman, Joseph. "Bebe Miller Company" Dance Magazine 16 Nob 1999. Print.
  • Dance Magazine, May 1986; December 1989.
  • Dance Theatre Journal, Spring 1987.
  • High Performance, Fall 1991.
  • Los Angeles Times, February 13, 1989; January 21, 1990; January 29, 1990; April 20, 1991.
  • Miller, Bebe Wilson Web 1999. The HW Wilson Web Company. Print.
  • New Yorker, February 20, 1989.
  • New York Times, November 30, 1989; May 26, 1991.
  • On the Next Wave, Brooklyn Academy of Music, October 1989.
  • San Francisco Chronicle, April 26, 1991.
  • 7 Days, December 13, 1989.
  • Washington Post, March 10, 1989.

— Alison Carb Sussman

External links