TMP Celebrates Mardi Gras With "Ma Maison" and "The Sweeter End" 
And New Orleans' Preservation Hall Jazz Band joins TMP live
BoiseWeekly.com - March 09, 2011 
by James Ady
Just days after 2011's Mardi Gras celebrations quiet down, Boise-based dance company 
Trey McIntyre Project  and the famed New Orleans Preservation Hall Jazz Band will rev the  festivities back up. The two performance powerhouses will join forces in  an exuberant mix of artistry, energy and visceral spirit on Saturday,  March 12, at the Morrison Center.
This collaboration has been in the subconscious making for years. New  Orleans is a beloved stomping ground for TMP Artistic Director Trey  McIntyre, who for years enjoyed the city's easily accessible proximity  to his dance alma mater, the Houston Ballet. During his years as a  regular visitor to the city, McIntyre established long-lasting  friendships and an affinity for the city's saturated culture.
"New Orleans is so welcoming, and the people are very similar to  Boiseans in the sense that no matter where you are, you always feel like  you belong," said McIntyre.
That affection led to the creation of 2008's 
Ma Maison and the brand-new 
The Sweeter End, both of which will be on the Morrison Center stage on Saturday for a matinee and an evening performance.
The idea for the two ballets first emerged in 2008 while TMP was  performing at New York's Association of Performing Arts Presenters.  Friends of McIntyre's from the New Orleans Ballet suggested some kind of  collaboration between his company and one of the jazz groups from the  Big Easy, spurring McIntyre to search out the right music for his  dancers.
After spending just one night at the world-renowned Preservation Hall and hearing PHJB live, McIntyre's decision was made.
"It's almost a religious experience to just be in that historic space  and hear them perform. You can actually see the grooves in the wood  floor where the musicians have stood for decades," said McIntyre, a  self-proclaimed dance anthropologist.
PHJB is a veritable Southern institution, which has counted some of  world's most talented jazz musicians and pioneers as members, including  Louis Armstrong, Buddy Bolden, Bunk Johnson and Jelly Roll Morton. Led  by creative director and PHJB tuba player Benjamin Jaffe, the musical  tour de force was founded in 1961 by Jaffe's parents, Allan and Sandra,  who named the band after its French Quarter home.
"The first time I met Trey, he was with some of the dancers from New  Orleans Ballet, and although I don't really know exactly what I expected  from meeting a choreographer, I was surprised by his gentle and calm  demeanor ... he was very laid-back," said Jaffe.
After that initial meeting with McIntyre, Jaffe expressed immediate  interest and commitment to an artistic merger, and the two respective  directors began brainstorming. McIntyre commissioned PHJB to write the  music to which he would choreograph both 
Ma Maison and 
The Sweeter End.  McIntyre was even present in the studio as PHJB recorded the music that  he would later take back to his home studio on Fulton Street for  rehearsals.
The brightly colored 
Ma Maison costumes, developed by  acclaimed New York-based designer Jeanne Button, are accentuated by  skeleton masks, adding quirky elements of androgyny, anonymity, humor  and fright. Costumes for 
The Sweeter End were imagined and  constructed by New York-based designer Andrea Lauer with denim donated  by Levi's--Lauer's designs in the familiar material are at once urban  and country.
Inspired by ritual, the celebration of death and the respectfully feared afterlife, both 
Ma Maison and 
The Sweeter End  are fueled by themes of life's pleasures and expressions of primal joy.  Both received fantastic audience response and critical praise after the  sold-out Feb. 7 performance in New Orleans in the 2,300-seat Mahalia  Jackson Theater. That night was the world premiere of 
The Sweeter End, which ended in a standing ovation and was a jubilant and fitting close to a powerful evening.
"We have been doing 
Ma Maison since 2008, and the piece takes  on a whole new feeling when we dance it with the musicians live," said  the energetic Chanel DaSilva, who has been with TMP since it was founded  in 2008.
As satisfying as the partnership has been, introducing a live  seven-piece jazz band into a dance performance posed a few artistic  challenges.
"It just takes some time to feel each other out, getting the tempos  correct and making sure no one feels artistically compromised," said  McIntyre.
TMP spent a full week in New Orleans prior to the Mahalia Jackson  Theater performance, rehearsing with PHJB to iron out all the little  nuances that make a good performance great. Now Boise audiences will get  to experience the culmination of this incredible collaboration. Jaffe  said he and the rest of the band are looking forward to being here, too.
"We have actually been to Boise and Sun Valley before, and the thing  that never gets old is seeing just how majestic the natural environment  is," Jaffe said. "You know, New Orleans is pretty flat, and we don't get  to see the mountains unless we're traveling, so Idaho is pretty cool  for us."
When asked what the future holds for TMP, McIntyre wasn't ready to divulge his plans.
"I am working on a few ideas, but nothing I'm ready to talk about," he said.
McIntyre did, however, admit to an ongoing desire to integrate the  latest technologies for his multi-media enhanced shows. He enjoys  remaining as flexible in his work as his dancers' rubber band-like  hamstrings.
Jaffe has some personal and professional expectations of his own that he hopes to express during the show.
"[I] always want the audience to leave having had a fantastic  experience," he said. "This is at the core of New Orleans music; it's  emotional and allows people the chance to celebrate."