The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Thursday, April 25, 1996               TAG: 9604250041
SECTION: DAILY BREAK              PAGE: E6   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY SUE VANHECKE, STAFF WRITER 
                                             LENGTH: Medium:   74 lines

EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED FROM VARONE

TACKLING such unlikely topics as the plight of French Canadian immigrants to New England, using unlikely music from big band to rock, or choreographing for the unlikely venue of a Geoffrey Beene fashion show - you've got to expect the unexpected from Doug Varone.

The esteemed dancer and choreographer brings his modern dance company to Virginia Beach Saturday, performing a versatile program that aims to reveal the sheer human-ness of dancing.

The evening's first work, ``Aperture,'' created in 1994, is an intriguing gestural series that builds and expands from a very small focal point onstage.

``It's a trio that explores people's perception of space,'' Varone said from his home in New York City. ``Over time, I've been really interested in how light can arrange and disarrange what a viewer sees. `Aperture' is like looking at a photograph that's come to life, in a way, and people keep coming in and out of the picture to change the dialogues that are occurring in the dance.''

``Let's Dance,'' subtitled ``Riffs On Seven Vernaculars'' and which enjoyed a critically hailed premiere at Manhattan's Joyce Theater in February, will follow. Set to music of the '40s, it's a joyful exploration of popular dance idioms, most of which Varone learned as a Broadway-dreaming, tap-dancing kid keen on Gene Kelly and Fred Astaire.

The third piece, ``Strict Love,'' which premiered in 1994, finds Varone toying with contrasts - of movement and music, of old and new Varone styles.

``A lot of the work that I do is very immediate, it's very personal, it deals with a lot of physicality and partnering, there's a real nice sense of humanness about it,'' Varone said. ``I wanted to create a work that denied that. So it's a dance for seven people who never touch, a lot of it is in unison, a lot of it is almost robotic in its approach.''

``Strict Love's'' unusual score is a tape taken from an oldies radio station, a countdown of the best songs of 1970 that includes ``a lot of Jackson Five, Diana Ross and Bread - all these crazy songs that I grew up with that we all know by heart and all speak so ridiculously about how great love is. So it's a juxtaposition of what you're hearing and what you're seeing.''

The company's signature piece, ``Rise,'' which Varone describes as ``a physical exploration of the score'' by John Adams, will conclude the program.

Varone, who founded his company in 1986 after dancing as a soloist with the Jose Limon and Lar Lubovitch Dance Companies, is no stranger to Virginia. For seven weeks a year from 1992 to 1995, he and his company enjoyed a residency at Richmond's Virginia Commonwealth University.

``It was a great opportunity for the company and the students,'' Varone recalled. ``It gave us a temporary home, a lot of creative time and a chance to discover an academic environment, which is very rare for professional artists.''

Education, in fact, has become a very vital aspect of Varone's work.

``I think a lot of what's gone wrong in the art world right now is that people aren't educated to what's happening,'' he mused. ``There are ways to inform people of what you're doing without losing your sense of integrity. We've been devising a lot of ways to kind of open up the door, particularly for audiences that aren't as educated in contemporary dance.

``There's a misnomer out there that (modern dance) is this wild thing that can't be understood, even when it's the most obvious picture in front of you.'' ILLUSTRATION: Graphic

IN PERFORMANCE

Who: Doug Varone and Dancers

When: 8 p.m. Saturday

Where: Virginia Beach Pavilion Theater

Tickets: $18-$20

Call: 627-2314

by CNB