An Oakland Dance Troupe Brings Vertical Choreography to Broadway
In 1990, Amelia Rudolph was hiking through Tuolumne Meadows, a stunning mountain pass in Yosemite National Park, when she had an epiphany on a shiny granite bluff: âCould you make a performance here?â she wondered. âCould you dance on a cliff?â
Rudolph, a dancer in the Bay Area who trained with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, had just written her college thesis on dance and ritual and recently become an avid climber. Those experiences converged in her mountaintop revelation â and inspired her to make a dance while dangling from the climbing wall at the gym where she worked.
That dance, though unrefined, was enthusiastically received. âI realized I tapped into some part of our human imagination that loves to fly,â Rudolph, 61, said in a phone interview.
From that seed grew Project Bandaloop, now just Bandaloop, a vertical dance company that fuses contemporary dance with climbing technique and technology. Using equipment, like harnesses, ropes and belay devices, Bandaloop can take danceâs soaring, ethereal qualities to extremes and bring them to unlikely perpendicular surfaces like the rock face of El Capitan in California or Tianmen Mountain in China.
âThe spirit of the company,â Rudolph said, celebrates âthe power and vulnerability of natural spaces.â
Now Bandaloopâs gravity-defying movement and ecological DNA have come to Broadway in the musical âRedwood,â starring Idina Menzel, which opened on Feb. 13.
At a rehearsal a few weeks earlier at the Nederlander Theater Menzel was on a platform, in a harness, a dozen feet off the ground in front of an enormous tree trunk â the setâs dramatic visual centerpiece â preparing to step into the air during a song about release.
âTry coming off the platform with a sense of float,â said Melecio Estrella, Bandaloopâs artistic director, from below.
Menzel leaned forward and was suddenly swinging freely. She hugged the trunk then pushed off into a gentle spin. Estrella encouraged her to find more buoyancy by landing back on the tree in pliĂ© â a typical dance note, except she was sideways, and singing. (Estrella is credited with the showâs vertical choreography, and other Bandaloop members contributed to rigging design, risk management and wellness.)
Earlier, Estrella spoke about the challenges of learning vertical choreography. âItâs not a form you can force,â he said, citing uneven surfaces and variations in momentum that can cause awkward landings or over-rotation in the air. âItâs a form you have to learn to ride.â
Initially, Menzel said she got headaches from the upended motion. âIâm using muscles I never use,â she said in an email. But the mix of risk and freedom, she added, has helped her âreturn to an innocence and a playfulness that I yearn for.â
In rehearsal, she again propelled herself from the tree, now into a backflip, achieving a suspended weightlessness that Estrella called âloftâ â a central ingredient in vertical choreography thatâs enhanced by the distance of a dancer from her anchor. (So the taller the dance surface, whether fake redwood or skyscraper, the more loft.)
Loft was one of the core movement principles that Rudolph identified as she was establishing her company in Berkeley in the 1990s with the goal of bringing together sport, art, nature and dance.
âWe spent a lot of time innovating and building technique,â she said. In particular, she drew from the âmentality of climbing, where youâre moving through terrain quickly and safely and in a light way.â
Without a permanent studio until 2003, Bandaloop rehearsed wherever it could â climbing gyms, rented walls at the nearby university, even the side of a highway, where a police officer once asked Rudolph what she was doing.
She replied, âIâm developing a dance form.â
There was some precedent. In 1970, Trisha Brown, the pioneering postmodern choreographer, presented the now celebrated piece âMan Walking Down the Side of a Building.â And Northern California, where Rudolph lived and worked, was also home to other dance artists working above the ground, like Joanna Haigood and Jo Kreiter.
But Bandaloop stood out because of its sense of scale, drama and artistry, and it attracted high-profile commissions. A dance on the Space Needle in Seattle for the Bumbershoot Festival in 1996 raised the troupeâs visibility. Later, the group worked with Pink on her performance at the American Music Awards in 2017 and danced on St. Paulâs Cathedral in London, in 2023.
âBandaloop has had incredible opportunities that most dance companies donât have,â Rudolph said, âbecause we have the âwowâ factor.â
But that wow factor, its whiff of spectacle (a word she likes to avoid), means Bandaloop hasnât always been embraced by traditional dance presenters who tend to program for proscenium stages.
So the company embraced nontraditional collaborations, like municipal partnerships and corporate work that came with bigger paychecks. âWe will cross into that world and learn from it,â Rudolph said. âWe gain from it economically and then feed it back into the art.â
That money helped the company put down roots in Oakland in 2007, where it recently signed a 20-year lease on an expanded 8,000 square-foot, light-filled studio, allowing it to increase its educational offerings and introduce more aspiring performers to its distinct style. (In 2020, Rudolph handed the Bandaloop reins to Estrella, an environmental activist and longtime dancer in the troupe. She remains a board member and leads ad hoc projects.)
In the early days, Bandaloop was composed of roughly half dancers and half climbers. Now, all company members have professional dance experience, though many also come from athletic backgrounds.
âDivers do really well,â Estrella said, citing their spatial awareness. He added, âIt takes a certain kind of dancer to want this kind of adventure.â
When Estrella joined Bandaloop in 2002 from the contemporary dance world, he had never been on a climbing wall. âI didnât really know what I was walking into,â he said.
But he was attracted to the groupâs thrilling physicality, as well as its melding of art, nature and politics. He grew up in Sonoma County among trees â his auntâs front yard had three giant redwoods. âThose are the forests that I played in as a kid,â he said.
As a teenager, he became involved in environmentalism, learning about direct action and how to support tree sitters. This was around the time when Julia Butterfly Hill lived in a redwood for more than two years to protest logging. (Her story partly inspired âRedwood,â and it briefly figures into the show.)
With Bandaloop, Estrella found a company in which dance and activism have long been intertwined. Bandaloop has created many works and community events promoting environmental stewardship, partnered with national parks, and recently engaged a consultant to evaluate its climate footprint. The company has also shared its technical and artistic expertise with climate activists and organizations like Greenpeace and Save the Redwoods League, imparting its safety protocols and advising on style, including what to wear and how to climb with flair to attract media attention.
âLetâs talk about costuming, letâs talk about color, letâs talk about the movement of dance,â said Thomas Cavanagh, an environmental activist who began as a Bandaloop rigger in 1998 before serving as its operations and technical director, and, since 2012, its executive director.
Bandaloopâs ecological values and showmanship made it an obvious fit for âRedwood,â about a grieving woman who finds connection in a forest and solace high in a towering tree. But the showâs director, Tina Landau, was unaware of the companyâs activist roots when she first reached out. She was simply drawn to the poetry of the groupâs work.
âThey really understood and captured what Iâm attracted to in the metaphor of flight,â she said. Later, she realized they were âkindred spiritsâ in their worldview as well.
During a preproduction excursion to redwood forests with Menzel, Landau noticed the caring way that the Bandaloop team related to the trees. âA lot of what we learned came from watching them,â she said.
In addition to its sensitivity to the natural world, Bandaloop brings with it âour culture of safety,â Cavanagh said. The company has never had a serious injury or incident, he said, only the âbruises, bumps and abrasionsâ that come with working in unusual locations.
Bandaloopâs spoken pre-climb safety checklist, which all climbers use in some form, even made its way into âRedwoodâsâ script, an acknowledgment of the danger always present when operating at great heights, and of the fear that comes with it.
Cavanagh described that fear, an inherent part of Bandaloopâs work, with an automobile metaphor: âWe like to say we keep fear in the passenger seat,â he said. âItâs not in the driverâs seat, but itâs very much in the car.â In other words, when you keep fear close, it canât surprise you.
When âRedwoodâ actors felt scared in the air, Landau said, she learned from Bandaloop how to navigate those moments by slowing down. As Estrella explained, âWe move only as fast as their fear allows.â
Since the âRedwoodâ premiere, the company has been developing a site-specific work called âFlock,â the final part of a trilogy addressing the climate crisis. âPart of what we have to deal with right now in climate is our grief,â Estrella said of the work.
Considering such existential issues, he says he often wonders why itâs important to bring audiences together around art. âFor me, itâs great purpose is to have a place to feel.â
Thatâs been true for Bandaloop for decades, whether the group is performing in a public park in Oakland or a storied Broadway theater.
To be part of a project like âRedwoodâ feels to Rudolph like a full-circle moment. âThe connection between the human body, the human spirit and natural spaces,â she said. âItâs so beautiful, because thatâs where Bandaloop started.â
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