Saturday, June 14, 2008

Julie Taymor on theater

What I love about what she says here is the idea of revealing the truth. In concert dance so much of what we talk about stays in our heads and because we know the audience won't understand our movement vocabulary literally we don't investigate what we are really saying/communicating. I think we should have something to say and that we should say it so the audience understands exactly what we are communicating so they don't have to ask us in a post performance discussion.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

The Dinner Party
















Last Tuesday I saw the third installment of the Dinner Party performance at the Warehouse Theater of new or experimental works in progress. It was a long show without intermission and it was hot in the back of the theater but it was nice to see so many people presenting work in this informal setting. I performed at the first Dinner Party and there were many more people there on Tuesday. Clearly this is something that is needed. I am happy to see this and the Mason/Rhynes adult themed Latenight being produced as a series.

In some ways the audience saw a lot of processes like setting up for a piece, starting over when it did not work out quite right, having the performers emerge from the audience. However in term of the actual work we were generally presented with what I call "shiny movement objects" which are like a ship in a bottle. You ask the question, how did they do that, arrive there, et cetera. When I talk about process I am reminded of a football game where you see the whole process of the game not just then end result. When I see dance I want to see more than the ship in the bottle, I want to see how you got the ship in there and why you decided to work that hard in the first place. There have been times in my life that I felt that dance was one of the few places that you could see abstraction so "save the abstract experience" was my motto. I am not so much interested in only seeing abstraction I want to know about a piece as I am watching it. I want to know the choreographer's intention and inspirations. I do not want to just be presented with a shiny movement object without knowing how it was made.
















While I was sitting in the feedback session of the Dinner Party I was struck by how many times a choreographer was asked or found themselves describing the process of making their work. I was also struck by the fact that I always wanted to see the processes they were talking about. So many times I said to myself I don't know what is going on, the performers have intention but are not sharing it. The presentation was about where they had arrived and it was frustrating to me because I knew that they came form somewhere. The descriptions of how they created their works were so vivid and inspiring that I wanted them to be central to the work not an aside only to be shared when asked in a feedback session. When I first learned composition in undergrad I was told not to make a story, to be abstract and to let the movement speak for itself. Well now that kind of instruction is outdated and useless. In my 25 years of watching dance, I may have seen almost everything a mover can do with abstraction many times over and now I would like to see some stories.