Text: Silvia Cruz Lapeña
Photos: Ana Palma
January 13th, 2013 – Teatro Coliseum – Barcelona
Farruquito and Karime, or vice versa
Last night Farruquito presented “Abolengo” at Barcelona’s Teatro Coliseum, a show choreographed by Antonio Canales, with Karime Amaya as special guest artist. Two powerful family lines, the Farrucos and the Amayas, breaking ground in Barcelona and defending traditional flamenco, something they managed to accomplish in a somewhat uneven fashion. The beginning was cold, and you didn’t feel the fury one would expect from these two heirs of flamenco dance. Karime was the invited artist, but in fact, much more than that. And Farruquito, despite the expansive quality of his talent, is better dancing on his own.
Farruquito didn’t have his best night. He had some awkward moments and looked a little tired…afterwards we found out he had a cold. But he’s got enough kindling to tame a cold, and he reduced the acrobatics to concentrate on other things, on moving his hips seductively, emulating his grandfather who never lost that unfailing swagger. He fooled around with a chair and with the audience, seducing a fake moon more convincingly that he seduced his dance partner. But there’s something you don’t learn: stage presence. And Juan has it. He smiles and the people applaud when he shows those pearly whites, looking more and more like his father all the time. That way he has of materializing out of thin air, like a spirit, of always holding his head in just the right way, this man must have learned that once upon a time in a dream, because it can’t be explained or copied.
As a couple, the two dancers had little rapport, and to say the Karime was a guest is very unfair. She danced nearly every piece and held nothing back. Poetry was missing in the duets, sensuality was missing and there was an excess of footwork, but the audience was expecting it with high hopes, and they got what they wanted.
Luckily we could count on Encarnita Anillo who has all the lineage she needs right in her vocal cords, and seems to be a thousand years old for all the wisdom in her voice. At just 30 years old, she was the godmother, the organizer, the cement that gave coherence to some rough moments. Juan José Amador and Antonio del Villar, one more muted and the other more dynamic, were both in top form. And Bernardo Parrilla deserves a chapter of his own: he played very concentrated and contained, bordering on sensational.