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Scene Again
Poetry in motion
by H. Jay Burns

They don't recall posing for this 1973 Modern Dance Company publicity photo, nor do they remember which production it was.

From left: Richard Patridge '73, Mary Griffin, '73, Johanna Smith Bazzolo '73, Anne Baker Lewis '73, Geri FitzGerald '75, John Carrafa '76.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Richard Partridge '73 (left) thinks it was an Alvin Ailey-inspired piece. MaryGriffin '73 (second from left) wonders if it's from the dance inspired by Jonathan Livington Seagull  and choreographed by John Carrafa '76 (far right). "Thus the arms," she says. "But the costumes aren't right."

Johanna Smith Bazzolo '73 (third from left) recalls what she might've been thinking: "Not to lose sight of Mary, who always remembered what to do." Anne Baker Lewis '73 (front) says she was likely "wondering how long I was going to have to hold the pose" for the camera. Geri FitzGerald '75 (second from right) admits being "blurry" on the details.

So their Bates dance memories are fading, right? Hardly. Our memories evolve from literal recollections into an eternal, internal poetry, at least by Wordsworth's definition of poetry as "powerful feelings ... recollected intranquility."

A title might fade from memory, but emotions — in this case, alumni emotions surrounding Bates dance — are colorfast.

To this day, Bazzolo says, "When I am struck by something beautiful, or am immensely happy, I find myself dancing — in my mind, at least!"

"The sheer joy and excitement of those years, and my gratitude to Marcy Plavin, will always be with me," Partridge says. Adds FitzGerald:"She found a place in dance for all of us."

See coverage of Plavin's retirement celebration at the College, May 1-2, in  Quad Angles and the profile on John Carrafa '76.

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Days of Honor: From a Lewiston pool Hall to Carnegie Science Hall, Bates seniors experience the "crucible" of the honors thesis.
Art in the Balance: Going global. Staying local. Can Mark Bessire, director of the Bates College Museum of Art, do both?
The John Show: A string of choreography successes for John Carrafa '76 puts him on Broadway's center stage.
Me and Jesus: In a dazzling Perry Atrium installation, artist K-Fai Steele '04 asks: "What if Jesus got the girl?"
'Keep in Touch': Commencement 2004 offered a nifty twist on tradition - all four honorary degree recipients offered remarks - but it was a Bates institution, Milton Lindholm '35 who helped color the day "Bates."



Preamble: Don't cry for me, says the editor
Open Forum: Lindholm's honorary degree; remembering the man they knew as "Hank" Stred '53; and a chippy letter about athletics.
Quad Angles: Dance of a Lifetime
Bates Matters: An Unmistakable Lesson
Scene Again: Poetry in motion
Sports Notes: Equipment manager Jim Taylor
Class Notes: Find out what fellow Bates alums are doing
Your Page: Grounded
Vital Stats: First comes love, then comes marriage...
Deaths: The stories of alumni lives
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