Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Long Walk in the city 6/21/11
It was a beautiful Boston summer day, eight hours of which I had spent in cramped air-conditioned offices. Walking home from class, I determined that it was a crime not to get out in the city and enjoy this fine weather. I arrived home, put on a serious pair of walking shoes, leashed up my exuberant longhaired dachshund, and headed for Mass Ave.
I started out walking on Massachusetts Avenue through the Back Bay towards Cambridge. The streets were full of traffic and swarms of various people and tourists looking to shop, drink, and dine on Newbury Street. The busy atmosphere on Newbury street is always exciting, but at rush hour it becomes almost too hectic. Continuing on through the back bay, I enjoy the relaxing quiet atmosphere that settles in as I walk further away from the busy streets. Tourists and shoppers are slowly replaced by runners, bikers, fellow dog walkers, and residents of the area traveling home . Rows and rows of beautiful, historic brownstones make up the majority of the buildings, with wide sidewalks and beautiful foliage lining the streets. After crossing Beacon street, I arrive at the Mass Ave bridge, and take the footbridge down to the Charles River.
The Charles River esplanade has always been one of my favorite outdoor places to go and relax in Boston. The atmosphere reminds me of my childhood in rural New Hampshire. My younger self enjoyed tree climbing, frog-catching, and lounging in gardens, burying my toes in the dirt. However, as a young musician applying for colleges, I couldn’t resist the pull of a city like Boston or New York. Thus the serenity I find in the esplanade is the closest I come to compromising with my adult self and my inner, younger self. Runners, bike riders, people walking, dog owners throwing Frisbees and tennis balls, young people, old people, and so many more make up the population that frequents this beautiful park. Besides attracting people looking for exercise, the esplanade also draws in sunbathers, students, tight-rope walkers, cooks lighting charcoal barbecues, musicians, and artists. With this amount of diversity, there is always something interesting to see.
My walk on the esplanade continued all the way to the footbridge exiting to Beacon Hill. After a brief stop to give my dog a drink of water, I continued the walk throughout the beautiful Beacon Hill neighborhood. As a proud resident of Boston concluding my third year in the city, I decided to randomly turn down new unexplored streets and blindly navigate to the Boston Common. The people I passed in Beacon Hill regarded me and my well groomed canine companion like fellow residents of “the hill”. I love living in Boston and the Beacon Hill neighborhood is one of the most historic and beautiful places to reside. It is also one of the most expensive, inhabited by notable individuals throughout history like Louisa May- Alcott, Charles Sumner, Edward Kennedy, John Hancock, and at present, the Heinz-Kerry’s. Many of the Beacon Hill homes were used as stops in the Underground Railroad. When I would stop to chat with a fellow walker I made no effort to confess that I actually lived in the much more affordable Symphony neighborhood. I indulged in a somewhat false identity on this leg of the walk that I was a property owner in this area, out for a walk after a hard days work trading stock, or in court; rather than practicing trumpet. I continued past beautiful building after building on the narrow streets. I took in tiny corner markets, playgrounds, and little farm stands set up on corners.
Soon I emerged on Beacon Street and crossed to walk along the Boston Common. This evening, the Common was brimming with life. As I walked on one of the many paths that cross this park, two gigantic young English Sheepdogs off of their leashes bounded towards my tiny dachshund and I. Instantly my 10 lb dog began simultaneously cowering between my feet and ferociously barking to warn off the much bigger dogs. As if on cue the sheepdog owners emerged wearing matching Lacoste polo shirts, apologizing for their dog’s behaviors. Immediately after apologizing they started questioning me about my dog’s training. “What dog school did she attend?” “Is she properly socialized?” I assured the couple that my dog was trained and fully socialized, explaining that she was not accustomed to being approached by energetic large dogs ten times her size. I finished chatting with this couple and walked away, finding a nice spot on the grass to lie down on.
As I laid on the grass, with my dog, I simply stayed in one place and watched the whole city move around me. After 15 minutes of this peaceful rest, I began my journey home; for my route home I walked down a bustling Boylston Street, and passed through Copley Square. Being a Tuesday, the farmer’s market was still going on, and I strolled amongst the tents watching as merchants finished their sales for the day and closed up shop. I continued home on Huntington Avenue, taking a detour through the Christian Science Plaza, to let my dog play in the fountain. Since it was hot that day, the fountain was crowded with young children, splashing, laughing, and playing while under the watchful eyes of their parents. I crossed Massachusetts Avenue, turned at Symphony Hall, and made my way home, feeling a little bit better acquainted with my city than when I started out.
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Dance for World Community Festival
On Saturday June 11, 2011 I attended the 3rd
annual José Mateo Dance for World Community Festival in Cambridge, MA. Despite
being a rainy cool June day many dancers, community members, and tourists bared
both the elements and the atrocious lack of parking to attend. Created by the José Mateo Ballet
Theatre, Dance for World Community aims to “harness the power of dance to
improve the social and environmental health of our communities locally and
beyond”. It aims to invite people to take part in collaborative action and
celebration for the well-being of the entire community.
This years festival involved 3 outdoor stages, 1 indoor
stage and 2 days of free performances, classes, and seminars about the
role dance has in today’s society. The festival also included an area called
“Advocacy Way”, where non- profit and social service organizations have booths
to speak about their work within the greater Boston community. There were 55
diverse groups performing and giving introductory lessons. Most of them were
Boston area dance companies, or schools of dance. There were modern dance
companies, belly dancing schools, flamenco performers, west African groups, ballerinas,
hip hop dancers, children’s groups, polish dancers, Persian dancers, and many
many more.
I felt as though the diversity of the types of
performers and types of classes offered was reflected in the many types of
people attending the festival. Children stood dancing in front of the stages,
attempting to reflect the moves they saw in the shows. Dancers with bandaged
toes, perfect buns, and beautifully turned out feet stopped to watch other
dancers as they passed by. Parents and families of performers came and went,
often assisting dancers with all of the costumes they were carrying. Many
people were taking tours of Harvard and simply happened upon this vibrant
festival. Some seemed to be drawn because of the vendors, pedaling jerk
chicken, seafood, barbecue, kebabs, ice cream, and more. It seemed as though this
many people could relate to this festival because it was a sort of celebration
of the human body.
One performance which stood out to me was the late
afternoon show by Luminarium Dance Company. Luminarium is a contemporary dance
company founded in the summer of 2010 by choreographers/ filmographers/
lighting designers/ thinkers Kimberleigh A. Holman and Merli V. Guerra. The
company describes themselves as “a new outlet for the performing arts”, and a
“think tank, museum, and gallery” for not only contemporary dance but also
contemporary ideas. Guerra and Holman incorporate fascinating video projection
and ingenious lighting choices to illuminate the dancers of their diverse
company and enhance the senses of viewers. A typical Luminarium show never
underwhelms, and audience members should be prepared to cry, laugh, smile; and
through these emotions be brought closer to their fellow human beings. Despite being outside under a tent, on
a stage with puddles in the corners, this performance did not fail to uphold
the high esteem with which I regard the company’s work.
The piece performed was entitled, “You have hands,
too?” and was co- choreographed by both Holman and Guerra. Even before I saw
any bodies on the stage, I was moved by the implications of this title. The
words were quirky and simple but my mind easily projected other meanings as
soon as I heard them. I could not stop thinking about one person turning to another
and saying “You have hands, too?”. It captures a moment where one becomes aware
that there is more to their world than themselves. That the inhabitants of
their world, who may talk, dress, look, or act differently, are the same as
they are. The festival emcee then announced a written description of the piece
that I found quite relevant.
“This piece is a
celebration of the amazing capabilities of the mind and body that every one of
us has been given. Remember not to take for granted each step, each thought
and each gesture. We hope that this piece inspires our audiences to go
forth to find their personal limit within the untapped physical potential that
their facility possesses.”
The performance began with all dancers
in the rear left corner of the stage. As the music began, the dancers began
somewhat of a game to line up diagonally across the stage. Each seemed to
have a number that, upon it being spoken, would instigate them to move forward
in the line. They wore white men’s dress shirts covered in hand written phrases. One
dancer emerged from the group dressed in black being propelled forward by
another dancer, who hurriedly crawled ahead of the dancer in black rolling out
a piece of fabric for her to step on, and fussing with her appearance. With
the contrast between costuming of the group and singled out dancer I was left
with imagery in my head akin to Seuss’s “Star-Bellied Sneetches”. Soon
the dancer and her attendant reached the end of the diagonal (where a
white shirt magically tumbled out of the unrolling fabric) for her to put on,
to join the group. Just after that, a dancer in a white dress shirt
without writing on it stumbled onto the stage, the group of dancers running
over to attack her with uncapped Sharpie markers, and to make her shirt match
theirs with writing covering the body and sleeves. Later in the piece
dancers chase each other around the stage and read the text off of each other’s
backs, before the piece burst into a very physical portrayal of what the human
body can do. The musical score to the piece ranged from a voice speaking
out numbers, to hands clapping, to waves crashing on a beach, to electronic
distorted fuzz ; there was frantic and chaotic music
woven into it all, blending seamlessly with the clapping and vocal insertions
that Guerra and Holman had concocted.
Overall, the work of Luminarium
choreographers Guerra and Holman is full of emotion. Rather than making their
dancers identical clones of one another, they give out roles and have each
dancer play a character. On the faces of the dancers you can read a story. One is
unsure about being
left out of a group but has a look of panic on her face when the group comes to
assimilate her into their kind. One is a curmudgeonly old man who taps
his foot while waiting for his usual bus, only to be copied and made fun of by
other characters on the stage who notice this strange man. Guerra and Holman
know their dancers well and as a result they make choreography to bring out the
individual talents that make their company spectacular as a whole.
I feel that in today’s fast paced world, where we
are always looking for the next best thing before it even exists, it is nice to
be reminded of how alike we all are. And through the varied performances,
classes, and spectators at the Dance for world Community Festival I was
reminded again and again that despite appearing different at first glimpse, we
all dance to the same beat.
Wednesday, June 01, 2011
About Town
It was a humid, steamy Thursday night around
10:00. I was walking back from Cambridge with some fellow band members talking
and laughing. We were making our way down Mass Ave, which seemed to be much
emptier than usual. Maybe it was the extreme heat and humidity, the first of
its kind this year, that drove everyone inside. After too long a walk, we
parted ways across from Symphony Hall and I mentally calculated the amount of
walking I had left to do before I reached my apartment.
Amidst mentally browbeating myself for half a
block for not packing a pair of flat shoes, and trying to get my mind off of
the pinched and numb feeling in my toes, my thoughts were interrupted by a
strange voice.
“Hey girl, you look like heaven…”
I looked to my left to see a strange man
sitting on the stoop of an apartment building. At first I was scared and
intimidated, looking over at him, but then I quickly looked straight ahead
again, completely ignoring the remark. I am from an average sized town in
Southern New Hampshire, population 25,000, where strangers walking on the same
street wave or stop and say, “Beautiful day it is today, perfect day to do some
planting!”. Where fathers teach their daughters to wave and chat with the canoe
full of people passing you by on the lake. So, it might have been the lack of
politeness in the voices of these complete strangers when they called out on
the street that offended me so. Not 2 minutes later, I heard a similar,
“You lookin’ so beautiful tonight…” and began
to feel extremely aggravated.
What is the goal of shouting supposed
compliments after women you see on the street? Is it to be considered a
compliment? Is it to let women know you are interested? Maybe it’s some macho
accomplishment thing when doing this in front of other men? Whatever the
reason, I grew angrier and angrier thinking over these questions in my mind. I
was hot and sweaty and bedraggled, the street was dark. I was pretty sure no
stranger who had never seen me before could judge what I looked like besides a
dress and heels. To me, these
shouted words, or even the ones that were softly spoken, were more demeaning
than complimentary.
In Spanish
culture, there is a form of pick up lines called “piropos”. These are told to
beautiful women when seen in public in Spanish cities. However, these lines are
more comical than serious. Some of the lines are like “tantas curvas y yo sin freño”. Which literally translates to “so
many curves and me without brakes”. Maybe these types of lines used in
Barcelona, Madrid, Burgos, are similar to the types of lines used in American
cities. Maybe these same lines are used all over the world by all types of men.
Either way, these types of lines are something that makes me miss my hometown.
Where neighbors are polite and men are chivalrous. Where houses are left
unlocked all day long because crime rarely happens. Where little rows of
vegetable gardens line the backyards of houses…
But the
city brings so much more. Even with strangers who may be less than polite. Even
with surprising transportation problems, strange smells, high rent. I left home
because of a big fish/ small pond kind of phenomenon. And I love that in the
city I rarely feel this way.
So while
finishing my walk down Westland Avenue I smirked a little bit to myself. I
figured that if these men were so inspired by the sight of me- frizzy haired,
dripping with sweat, in visible pain from sore feet, loaded up like a pack mule
with various musical equipment, then I would allow them to get away with their
silly lines. I guess meeting strange people on the street is something that
comes with all of the remarkable things it has to offer. And when I think about
it, I would rather have strange people who have well known quirks and do
bizarre things than people who are extremely polite yet also very predictable.
Labels:
About town,
boston,
ma,
metropolitan diaries
Location:
Boston, MA, USA
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