“It always seems to me amazing that we had such flawless poets among us in our youth. But for that very reason I also keep wondering, with a kind of secret anxiety: can such artists sworn entirely to the art of poetry exist in our own times, in our new way of life, which chases people out of their own peace of mind like animals running from a forest fire?”
Stefan Zweig, The World of Yesterday (trans. Anthea Bell)


For a long time I used to go see the
Flash forward to January, when Mrs. T and I went to a
I was hit especially hard by Beloved Renegade, a 2008 dance inspired by the words of Walt Whitman that is set to Francis Poulenc’s Gloria, one of my favorite pieces of postwar classical music. As is Taylor’s frequent wont, the dance is darker than the music that acccompanies it. It is, in fact, a valedictory statement by a man who turned seventy-eight not long before he made it. Not only does Taylor quote from Aureole and Esplanade in Beloved Renegade, but he also evokes one of the most celebrated tableaux in George Balanchine’s Serenade, another dance masterpiece that is, like Beloved Renegade, touched by the shadow of death. 
The management clearly shared my concerns, since the program contains the following full-page warning: THIS PRODUCTION CONTAINS STRONG PROFANITY THROUGHOUT. But that hasn’t stopped Maltz Jupiter from delivering the goods: J. Barry Lewis’ exhilaratingly full-blooded staging is paced to perfection—each and every F-bomb hits its target—and gratifyingly well cast….