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Dance Reviews : Christopher Aponte’s Balletic Showcase

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As a ballet dancer, Christopher Aponte offers a brilliantly honed, perfectly proportioned body along with equally remarkable expressive powers. He is a superb performer--and he needs to be, since his choreography often flings out ideas without developing them and borrows styles from all over the map.

A showcase for Aponte’s dancing and choreography at the Embassy Theatre began Saturday with “King of Stars,” in which Aponte wore a crown of thorns and hung from a huge wooden cross. It ended with him dancing Ravel’s “Bolero” as a solo. This is not an artist who suffers from self-doubt.

Among its other purposes, the program served as a benefit for the CareGivers project, a nonprofit, San Francisco-based organization that treats burnout among those who aid the terminally ill. This context added poignancy to the program’s highlight: “Adagietto From Mahler’s Fifth Symphony,” a demanding gymnastic duet in which Andreas Folsom supported and helped guide Aponte through what seemed an essentially spiritual crisis.

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Expanded frontiers for male dancing proved the issue both here and in Aponte’s other personal vehicles--as well as Philip Jones’ tentatively executed, Graham-esque solo “Renewal,” the only work not choreographed by Aponte. Tracing a dynamic scale and range of emotions usually denied men in American ballet, Aponte, Jones and Folsom suggested potent European alternatives.

Elsewhere, however, Aponte used men as mere cavaliers.

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