Related Features

Contribute

Your support helps us cover dance in New York City and beyond! Donate now.

IMPRESSIONS: Fall For Dance (Program One) Featuring Akram Khan, Jamar Roberts & Dario Natarelli

IMPRESSIONS: Fall For Dance (Program One) Featuring Akram Khan, Jamar Roberts & Dario Natarelli
Christine Jowers/Follow @cmmjowers on Instagram

By Christine Jowers/Follow @cmmjowers on Instagram
View Profile | More From This Author

Published on October 8, 2025
Sara Mearns and Jamar Roberts. Photo by Steven Pisano

Falling In Love Again at New York City Center

Fall for Dance (Program One)

New York City Center, 131 W 55th St, New York, NY

September 17, 2025


For 22 years, Fall for Dance at New York City Center has spectacularly opened NYC's dance season. The festival offers unbelievably affordable tickets (this year's general admission cost between $23 - 30), and on every bill you will experience a top-tier lineup of dance artists from the United States and around the world. Bar none, it's the hottest dance ticket in town. This year, I scored coveted press tickets to Programs One, Two, and Three and was thrilled.

Being in the house for such a diverse range of dance encourages one to reflect on their tastes — what appeals, what doesn't, and why. What I relearned about myself is that I find the most successful and pleasing dance works (and artists) to be the ones that make me forget I am watching dance altogether.  

For a detailed who's who of the artists,  click here

Special thanks to Steven Pisano for sharing his photographs

To read about Programs 2 and 3, click here 


The standout work of Program One was Akram Khan's Dust (2013), a New York premiere originally set on the English National Ballet, and performed brilliantly by the San Francisco Ballet. Khan doesn't simply create dance; he crafts an epic where movement is the primary vehicle of expression. With an uncompromising eye, he guides us through the details of his landscape, devising memorable images and seamlessly transitioning from solo stories to group ones, compelling us to follow. 

 

man, backlit, shirt less, grabbing at his spine
Akram Khan's Dust. Photo by Steven Pisano
 

A topless male dancer seated downstage, facing away from us, flexes and grabs at his spine; he appears tortured. As we become engrossed and curious, we realize, with the lights rising, that a vast crowd, rocking back and forth, is gathered before this man, peering at him as if mesmerized by his suffering. Behind them lies a mountain. We don't know as yet what is happening, but Khan has our attention. 

the corps configured to look like a large snake on either side of the main character
Akram Khan's Dust. Photo by Steven Pisano
 

As the story develops, the men in the group desperately ascend the mountain to its other side; the atmosphere suggests they're in the midst of war. The women, left behind, fend for themselves, dancing determinedly in their community for survival. Amidst a stage filled with powerful females, Khan shifts our focus to a lone soldier descending the mountain, returning from battle. As the group dissolves, one woman, (Katherine Barkman) and this soldier (Victor Prigent) make love, through dance, as if they are the last two people on the scorched earth. A far off scratchy recording in the background plays to the tune of Auld Lang Syne, "We're here because, we're here because, we're here because…." emphasizing the desolation.

Kahn and all the artists associated with this masterwork remind us of the seduction and horror of war, as well as the profound need, even in the most inhumane circumstances, for human connection.
 

Akram Khan's Dust. Photo by Steven Pisano

grabbing the mans waist with her legs surrounding his torso the woman leans backwards her body grazing the floor
Akram Khan's Dust. Photo by Steven Pisano
 

Dance Is  A Mother (2025), which opened the evening, was choreographed earlier this year by Jamar Roberts, a commission by NY City Center for Sara Mearns l Artists at the Center. The dance brims with statuesque movement often generated from flowing arm gestures. The most alluring dance artists (though all are first-rate) are Roberts and Jeroboam Bozeman.  
 

Jamar Roberts' Dance Is A Mother. Photo by Steven Pisano
 

Fully in their element, the two men appear to swim through the air, commanding it. Carolyn Shaw's music played live on stage by the Attacca Quartet; vocalist Raquel Acevdo Klein's lyrics riffing Shakespeare's "A rose by any other name would smell as sweet"; the duet between Mearns and Roberts, a poignant contrast of her lightness of being with his unwavering solidity; the ticking clock in the score towards the end as Mearns walked toward a beam of light, are all intriguing, but,  how these elements fit together and what they were trying to say, I wasn't sure. 
 

Jeroboam Bozeman in Dance Is A Mother. Photo: Steven Pisano
 
Jamar Roberts' Dance Is A Mother. Photo by Steven Pisano
 

Dario Natarelli taps away to George and Ira Gershwin's The Man I Love in a 2023 choreography of the same name created by himself and tapper extraordinaire, Michelle Dorrance (another City Center commission). Derek Louie, on the cello, enters once the piece begins, accompanying the recorded music and the dancer, almost in a dreamlike state. Indeed, Natarelli reaches toward the musician in luscious, pleading arabesques as if approaching the unattainable.
 

Dario Natarelli in The Man I Love. Photo: Steven Pisano
 

When he can't have the cellist or his instrument, Natarelli's inner frustrations erupt into an audience-rousing, full-bodied, virtuosic symphony. I wish the guy GOT his dream guy in this scenario. I longed for more interaction between these two talented  artists. 
 

Dario Natarelli in The Man I Love. Photo: Steven Pisano
 
Dario Natarelli  and Derek Louie  in The Man I Love. Photo: Steven Pisano



Look out for Part 2 of  IMPRESSIONS: Fall for Dance at NY City Center

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

1. 

Dance Is A Mother 
Choreography JAMAR ROBERTS  //   Music: CAROLINE SHA
Lighting Design: BRANDON STIRLING BAKER   //  Costume Design: MARC HAPPEL
Dancers: JEROBOAM BOZEMAN,  ANNA GREENBERG , JACQUELIN HARRIS, SARA MEARNS, JAMAR ROBERTS
Musicians:  ATTACCA QUARTET- AMY SCHROEDER, Violin RACHEL SHAPIRO, Violin  NATHAN SCHRAM, Viola  //  FELIX UMANSKY, Cello,RAQUEL ACEVEDO KLEIN, Vocalist

2. 

The Man I Love
Choreography: MICHELLE DORRANCE and DARIO NATARELLI  //  Staging: MICHELLE DORRANCE and DARIO NATARELLI  //  Music: GEORGE and IRA GERSHWIN  //  Lighting Design: KATE ASHTON
Dancer: DARIO NATARELLI  //  Musician: DEREK LOUIE, Cello

3. 

Dust (NY Premiere)

SAN FRANCISCO BALLET  //  Tamara Rojo, Artistic Director
Direction and Choreography AKRAM KHAN  //  Music JOCELYN POOK  //  Dramaturg RUTH LITTLE
Staging CRYSTAL COSTA  //  Coaching MAVIN KHOO  //  Lighting Design FABIANA PICCIOLI  //  Scenic Design SANDER LOONEN  //  Costume Design KIMIE NAKANO  //  Production Stage Manager KATIE ORR
SEP 17 | KATHERINE BARKMAN VICTOR PRIGENT
JIHYUN CHOI, THAMIRES CHUVAS, JACEY GAILLIARD
CARMELA MAYO, NICOLE MOYER, HUI-WEN PENG
ELIZABETH POWELL, LEILI RACKOW, JAMIE ADELE STEPHENS
MAGGIE WEIRICH ,SEOJEONG YUN
RUBÉN CÍTORES NIETO, LUCA FERRÒ
ANDRIS KUNDZINS JOÃO PERCILIO DA SILVA, DYLAN PIERZINA
NATHANIEL REMEZ ,JASPER TRUE STANFORD, ARCHIE SULLIVAN
MINGXUAN WANG, ADRIAN ZEISEL


The Dance Enthusiast Shares IMPRESSIONS/our brand of review, and creates conversation.
For more IMPRESSIONS, click here.
Share your #AudienceReview of performances. Write one today!


The Dance Enthusiast - News, Reviews, Interviews and an Open Invitation for YOU to join the Dance Conversation.

Related Features

More from this Author