Instalan en Times Square tradicional esfera iluminada

La icónica plaza de Times Square, donde cada año más de un millón de personas se concentra para dar la bienvenida al Año Nuevo en Nueva York, cuenta desde hoy con la esfera de cristal iluminada cuyo descenso marcará este sábado el tránsito a 2012 en la ciudad de los rascacielos.

Nueva York ultima así los preparativos para una de las celebraciones de Nochevieja más populares de todo el mundo con la colocación de esa bola de cristal, que se alza ya en lo más alto del edificio Uno de Times Square, sede durante décadas del diario The New York Times.

La esfera está compuesta por 2.688 triángulos de cristal diseñados por la firma Waterford Crystal, que para este año ha incluido un nuevo diseño para 288 de esos cristales bajo el nombre de “Let There Be Friendship” (Que haya amistad, en español), con un grabado de personas cogidas de la mano alrededor del mundo, según detalla en su web la Alianza Times Square, encargada de las festividades.

La descomunal esfera multicolor, que pesa más de cinco toneladas y está iluminada por 32.256 lámparas LED (diodo emisor de luz), descenderá 24 metros en el último minuto de 2011 para dar la bienvenida al Año Nuevo, como ha venido haciendo desde 1907, cuando se dio comienzo a esta tradición.

Desde entonces, la famosa bola ha realizado ese descenso cada año, a excepción de 1942 y 1943, cuando la ceremonia fue suspendida debido a la Segunda Guerra Mundial, por lo que en esos años la ceremonia fue sustituida por un minuto de silencio seguido de unas campanadas.

La popularidad de la fiesta de Nochevieja en Times Square lleva cada año a que la plaza esté repleta horas antes de la medianoche, una espera que amenizan estrellas de la música.

Este año serán Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga y el cubano Pitbull, entre otros, los encargados de entretener al tumulto de gente llegada de todas partes del mundo que durante todo el día se concentra allí.

Además, al igual que el año pasado, se instalará en la plaza una “Plataforma de Besos”, donde parejas que han estado mucho tiempo separadas se encontrarán ante miles de personas, al tiempo que Nivea repartirá barras de cacao para que la gente se prepare para los tradicionales besos con que debe recibir el año nuevo.

Cortesia de PrimeraHora.com

Hula finds new Alloy.(cross-cultural dance program)

Dance Magazine April 1, 1997 | Lokken, Dean THE BIG ISLAND, Hawaii–For Dance Alloy, artistic director Mark Taylor had a tough assignment: Leave Pittsburgh for the frigid month of January and live on Hawaii’s sunsplashed Big Island, learning to hula.

The result of the company’s labors–a cross-cultural performance using six Dance Alloy performers and ten performers from Halau Hula Ka No’eau, a hula school in Waimea, Hawaii–will be seen April 26 at Pittsburgh’s Byham Theater. It premiered in January in Hawaii.

Taylor’s interest in creating an entirely new work that merges modern dance with an art form practiced for centuries by Hawaiians brought him together with Michael Pili Pang, founder and kuma hula, or teacher, of the Waimea school. Their joint work, which both say was a 50/50 endeavor, is based on the kumulipo, the Hawaiian creation chant. The chant, more than 2,300 lines long, was passed on from generation to generation of Islanders and never written down until the late 1800s (Hawaiians missionaries arrived more than a century ago). go to website big island hawaii

“We have taken 125 lines and divided them into four sections, basically dealing with creation and evolution,” says Pang, who has studied with some of the best hula chanters and teachers in Hawaii. The kumulipo lacks a recognizable melody, since whoever performed it over the years provided whatever melody they wanted. So Pang wrote one for `Ike: Body of Knowledge, as the new work is called. `Ike is Hawaiian for “body of knowledge,” or “to see, know, or feel.” The sections of the thirty-minute piece begin with the formation of the world out of cosmic dust and end with the creation of plant forms on land, an environment ready for the arrival of humans.

Pang says writing the melody was his biggest challenge. He turned to some traditional Hawaiian instruments, like split bamboo sticks and seashells, to reproduce the sounds of wind and surf.

“The next biggest challenge was for the dancers themselves,” he says. “Both sides had to learn someone else’s music and their language of dance.” To prepare the visiting Dance Alloy company for its artistic adventure, the Hawaiian hosts started with a four-day study of Hawaiian customs, behavior, and poetry. University of Hawaii lecturers and elders from the local community explained the intricacies of Hawaiian culture. The dancers made a trip to Kilauea volcano, currently the most active one in the islands, to explore the importance that Hawaiians place on the life-giving force of the volcanoes that created the mid-Pacific islands. And they made an excursion to the beach to experience the ebb and flow of the ocean.

Pang’s halau demonstrated for the Dance Alloy performers how hula dancers make their own instruments and fashion their costumes from leaves and other items they find in the forest. “We live in a much more stratified society,” Taylor says of his dancers, comparing them to the way a hula halau functions. “It’s really been great to have Michael ask our dancers to walk into the woods to find their own ferns.” Barbara Furstenberg, director of community services at the University of Hawaii, had a hand in organizing the `Ike project, which she says challenges assumptions about dance, its origins, and its presentation. She points out that the work by Taylor and Pang gives a much different view of hula than that held by most Mainlanders–the hip-swaying hula popularized and stereo-typed decades ago by Hollywood through Jeanette MacDonald in Let’s Go Native (1930) and Shirley Temple in Curly Top (1935), or in songs like Honolulu Hula Girl, written to entertain tourists and radio audiences. True hula, Furstenberg says, is the “quintessential expression of Hawaiian cultural values,” deeply rooted in tradition and legend. For Hawaiians, studying and performing hula is a lifelong undertaking, requiring concentration, discipline, and constant practice. go to website big island hawaii

Hawaii has been experiencing a resurgence of hula since the 1970s, partly as a result of a Hawaiian Renaissance that has established schools where Hawaiian is the central language, a vigorous Hawaiian studies program at the University of Hawaii, and a native sovereignty movement. The dance was nearly extinguished in the 1800s by missionaries who called it a sign of “destitution, degradation, and barbarism.” The language and the chants that are the core of hula were suppressed by teachers and public authorities.

Today, both young and old Hawaiians and haole, or Caucasians, embrace hula. It’s taught in public schools, and its students practice in church auditoriums, school cafeterias, corporate conference rooms, and public parks.

Taylor sees the collaboration with Pang’s halau as an opportunity for Dance Alloy to create a piece that does not represent either of their past bodies of work. “I feel like there’s something really contemporary growing out of the work, something that feels unique,” he says.

For Dance Alloy, Taylor adds, the monthlong residency in a sunny paradise was also a chance to explore a culture where “dance is not about what technique they are using, but about the way they share their spirit with people. And that’s something I think Western dancers have lost.” Besides performing jointly in `Ike, the sixteen Hawaii and Pittsburgh dancers will present dances from their own repertories in the Pittsburgh program.

When he’s not boogie-boarding at his favorite Oahu beach, Dean Lokken is a copy editor at the Honolulu Advertiser.

Lokken, Dean

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