Dance

Dance NOW!’s Site-Specific ‘Havisham!’ Leaps Into Classic Dickens

Written By Guillermo Perez
February 4, 2024 at 6:36 PM

Dance “NOW! Miami dancers in Havisham!, from left, Natalia Uribe Flores, Julia Faris, Jean Da Silva, Amanda Davis, Austin Duclos, Rae Wilcoxson, and David Jewett, at the North Miami Beach’s Ancient Spanish Monastery, on Wednesday, Feb. 7 and Thursday, Feb. 8. (Photo courtesy of Kenny Palacios)

Miss Havisham, as Charles Dickens conceived her for his novel “Great Expectations,” bears no first name, only a title to indicate single status and that family stamp with its last syllable—like a last breath—a synonym for fraud. Addressed as such, she reveals, in full Gothic guise, the horror of her presence and the cruelty of her acts.

Having been jilted at the altar, the odd and odious character goes on wearing her wedding dress and embarks upon revenge, weaponizing her adopted daughter Estella against first-person narrator Pip.

Dance “NOW! Miami dancers in “Havisham!” Amanda Davis, Jean Da Silva, and Julia Faris. (Photo courtesy of Kenny Palacios)

Now, 160-plus years after the novel’s publication, Hannah Baumgarten, artistic co-director of Dance NOW! Miami, has revived this antagonist as the central interest in “Havisham!” blessing her with a backstory to redeem a life where sacred rite has been corrupted into sin.

For this full-evening, site-specific premiere, the South Beach Chamber Ensemble will play a mix of popular and classical selections live amplifying the characters’ desires and despair at North Miami Beach’s Ancient Spanish Monastery, on Wednesday, Feb. 7 and Thursday, Feb. 8. Audiences will progress from courtyard to cloister to chapel before ending up at the mausoleum corridor, following a guide (Natalia Uribe) who announces phases of the plot in English and Spanish.

Baumgarten discloses the basis of the presentation, saying, “I’ve always loved to take well-known stories and re-tell them through the female lens. My feminism comes out through my choreography.”

This began with her first work, pre-DNM, twenty-four years ago. (At present she sometimes collaborates with company co-director Diego Salterini, himself an individual contributor to the repertory.) That duet, “Achilles and Penthesilea,” features the clash between the epic Greek hero and the queen of the Amazons. But in this dance the courage of the latter as warrior does not take second place.

Dance “NOW! Miami’s “Havisham!,” features, from left, Rae Wilcoxson, Amanda Davis and Austin Duclos. (Photo courtesy of Kenny Palacios)

Other woman-centered works continued to strengthen Baumgarten’s output, including portraits of Jocasta, mother and wife of Oedipus, and the Biblical Hannah, whose sanity even her son Samuel questioned.

“There are always underlying stories that are extremely interesting,” says the choreographer. “And shifting the lens toward women gives us a new perspective on narrative themes.”

Baumgarten realizes that received culture can thus become more valuable to our contemporary viewpoint. But she emphasizes, “This isn’t a wave I’m riding. The current piece is not a trend for our company.”

With its connection to her family, “Havisham!” is a project of the heart for Baumgarten. Her college-professor father Murray, a Dickens scholar, made literature integral to their household. “The first book I ever read,” reveals the choreographer, “was ‘Great Expectations.’”  Her mother Sheila became executive director of Shakespeare Santa Cruz, giving Hannah access to the layers that hold up drama as she assisted in managing productions. “It bred into my brain there’s lots of action behind conflict and resolution,” she says.

That fascination with narrative—and the untold stories behind each surface—carried into Baumgarten’s choreography. She says, “In Dickens, Miss Havisham is an archetype of malice. But I tried to understand why she became that horrible person.”

The question led her to invent an episode of youthful love for the spidery spinster before betrayal soured the nectar of passion into poison. “Havisham!” will thus feature two dancers portraying the lead character at different periods, tapping into psychoanalytic notions about the enduring effects of trauma.

For dancer Amanda Davis, a New World School of the Arts graduate who’s been with DNM for three years, portraying the older Havisham has brought both the discovery of an impacting tale and the challenge of inhabiting that dark place.

“I wasn’t familiar with this story,” she admits, “and only after Hannah explained it did I watch a version of ‘Great Expectations’ recently streaming. I found myself paying close attention when Miss Havisham came on scene. I’m a very visual person so that helped me get into character.”

Through her discussions with Baumgarten, she began to delve into the complexities of a woman, once victim then victimizer, who uses others as tools. “She reminds me of a strict mother who becomes demonizing,” says Davis. “Embodying that has all to do with the directives in the choreography.”

Amanda Davis in Dance “NOW! Miami’s Havisham!” (Photo courtesy of Kenny Palacios)

The dancer explains that in the opening section, referred to in rehearsals as “the ugly solo,” she sits at a table in monster mode until she sees Estella (played by Rae Wilcoxson) and eagerly takes her into her arms. But soon Havisham manipulates the girl like a puppet master. “Hannah puts her into positions like a doll,” says Davis—so that ensuing social instruction for Pip (Austin Duclos) turns into punishment, drilling humiliation into the boy. “It’s as if she’s telling Estella, ‘I care for you, but this is what you’re going to do for me whatever the cost.’”

For Davis, it hasn’t been easy to penetrate that twisted soul. “By now, I’ve gotten a good rhythm for Hannah’s choreography. But movements in one piece—say, how I do an arm reach—can have a totally different meaning in another. That can begin with the focus of the eyes. Then the emotion has to go through the whole body.”

To give this more authenticity, she’s been paying close attention to the details of characterization required of Julia Faris, who plays young Havisham, since significant gestures echo between them.

Starting with a flashback, a duet with a captivating suitor (Jean Louis Da Silva), Faris revels in the thrill of first love. “For that I can pull from emotions I felt as a college student,” reveals the 26-year-old Faris. “It was a complete infatuation, pretty much giving my all to the person in front of me because that’s all I knew how to do.”

Into her fifth year with the company, Faris feels at ease with Baumgarten’s way with movement. And, dancing with Da Silva, she’s enjoyed—from their suggestive gaze to the friskiness at their limbs—a smooth connection.

But that seems like a distant Eden when Faris finds herself alone at the altar waiting in vain for the groom to appear. This is especially powerful as the audience sits in the pews of the monastery chapel, which actually serves as a wedding venue, and Father Gregory, the sanctuary’s resident priest, presides.

Dance “NOW! Miami presents Hannah Baumgarten’s
Havisham!.” Dancers pictured are Jean Da Silva and Julia Faris. (Photo courtesy of Kenny Palacios)

The pivotal breakdown Faris acts out—reaching up as if to curse heaven, then plummeting as if pulled down into hell—concludes as the young Havisham—her pristine wedding dress, like her life, bound for ruin—crawls off behind the apparition of old Miss Havisham, her own gown already a bilious yellow.

Both dancers portraying the age-separated Havishams praise the visual force of those garments—designed and constructed by sisters Haydée and Maria Morales—and emphasize the importance of conscientiously spinning and lunging within their folds and length. Also of great consequence is the location.

“Site-specific work,” says Davis, “embraces the movement and helps me get into character. It can seem more real with people being so close, looking at me.”

As if sending out an invitation for us to come as participants to the show, she adds, “Seeing how audiences feel, I can reflect off that. And that interaction is something you really can’t get from a stage.”

WHAT:   Dance NOW! Miami “Havisham!”

WHEN:   6:30 and 8 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 7 and Thursday, Feb. 8.

WHERE:  Ancient Spanish Monastery, 16711 West Dixie Highway, North Miami Beach

COST:     $25 general admission, $15for students with ID.

INFORMATION:     305-975-8489 or dancenowmiami.org

ArtburstMiami.com is a nonprofit media source for the arts featuring fresh and original stories by writers dedicated to theater, dance, visual arts, film, music, and more. Don’t miss a story at www.artburstmiami.com.

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