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DANCE REVIEWS : Footprints Looms Large at Benefit

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Footprints, an eminently watchable, New York-based dance company that traces its steps to Alvin Ailey and, before him, Lester Horton, came to the right place for the right reason Wednesday: a benefit concert at the Morgan-Wixson Theater produced by Horton documentarian Lelia Goldoni.

Most important, the message was delivered with creative vitality, powerful technique and the kind of exuberance that the predecessors of this seven-member troupe projected in excelsis.

What’s more, co-directors/choreographers Freddie Moore and Ray Tadio, both sterling, body-perfect dancers on their own, did not use the platform for strictly solo purpose.

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Instead, they blended into the ensemble numbers, even giving the spotlight to the deserving Ayako Morigami and Laura Rossini (utterly delectable in Tadio’s “Tik-Ka,” an effective gloss on ethnic exotica).

The choreography--which exulted in full-out extensions, soaring arms, snappy turns, arching backs and luxurious undulations--defined movement as drama. It even honored the Horton social conscience in Tadio’s “Lover Man,” a palpably brutal essay on woman-abuse with Carolyn Lanfredi as the convincing victim.

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