this week in dance

TRISHA BROWN DANCE COMPANY

Trisha Brown gem “Opal Loop/Cloud Installation #72503” is part of special season at BAC (photo by Babette Mangolte)

Trisha Brown gem “Opal Loop/Cloud Installation #72503” is part of special season at BAC (photo by Babette Mangolte)


40th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION

Baryshnikov Arts Center
450 West 37th St.
April 7-11, $25
www.trishabrowncompany.org
www.bacnyc.org

For forty years, Trisha Brown has had one primary goal: “I’m trying to make the perfect dance, that’s what drives me,” she’s said. The award-winning choreographer, opera director, and accomplished artist (whose drawings are regularly displayed in galleries) is celebrating the fortieth anniversary of her company with a special five-night, ten-show season at the Baryshnikov Arts Center’s Howard Gilman Performance Space. In this forty-five-minute program, Brown will be looking back with the 1994 solo “If you couldn’t see me,” in which she collaborated with Robert Rauschenberg, and the 1980 rarity “Opal Loop/Cloud Installation #72503,” in which she worked with cloud sculptor Fujiko Nakaya. Continuing the celebration, she will complete her five-part lecture series at Dance Theater Workshop on April 11 with a discussion about her visual art and on May 23 with an examination of her legacy. And on May 1, her yearlong residency at Dia:Beacon ends with the staging of “Opal Loop/Cloud Installation #72503,” 1963’s “La Chanteuse,” a solo that hasn’t been seen since its initial presentation, and “Rafts” on the Hudson River (weather permitting).

THE LAST LOFT SHOW

Human Kinetics will be performing the site-specific movement “Poem #3” at the opening party for the Puffin Room’s closing exhibition (photo by Harry Schnitzler)

A CELEBRATION OF 15 YEARS IN SOHO
The Puffin Room
435 Broome St. between Broadway & Crosby St.
Saturday, April 3, $5, 6:00 – 9:00
212-343-2881
www.puffinroom.org

After fifteen years, the Puffin Room will be saying goodbye to SoHo, but not without one last send-off. On Saturday night, their final exhibition, “The Last Loft Show,” which will indeed be the last show in the loft space, kicks off with special events celebrating the history of the alternative performance venue. Using as its guiding theme the Walt Whitman quote “Resist much, obey little,” the show will include photos from the Spanish Civil War, “Shocked and Awed” children’s drawings from Iraq, political posters, Dorothea Lange’s dramatic “Photos of the Japanese American Internment,” and pictures from Allan Tannenbaum’s “John Lennon in NYC” series. There will also be pieces by such loft artists as Barbara Thomas, Gene Thompson, Christa Grauer, Louis Mendez, Marion Pinto, and Puffin Room director and curator Carl Rosenstein. The opening party, on April 3 from 6:00 to 9:00, will feature live performances by Cui Fei, Ilse Schreiber-Noll, Irving Epstein, Margaret Silverman, Miriam Rosenstein, Song Xin, and Yana Schnitzler’s Human Kinetics troupe, which specializes in site-specific dance installations. On April 10, Steve Ben Israel, Michael Schwartz, Ngoma, and others will participate in “The Last Word,” while things promise to get funky on April 17 with “The Last Dance” party the day before the exhibit closes. The three Saturday events are $5 each, with proceeds benefiting Greenpeace. (Above photo by Harry Schnitzler: Human Kinetics will be performing the site-specific movement “Poem #3” at the opening party for the Puffin Room’s closing exhibition)

THERE IS SO MUCH MAD IN ME

Dancers search for connections in extraordinary production (photo by Yi-Chun Wu)

Dancers search for connections in extraordinary new production from Brooklyn-based choreographer Faye Driscoll (photo by Yi-Chun Wu)

Dance Theater Workshop
219 West 19th St.
March 31 – April 3, $15
212-924-0077
www.dtw.org
www.fayedriscoll.com

In her brilliant new evening-length piece, rising star Faye Driscoll sets the bar high, daring both cast and audience to reach it — and they do, with spectacular results. Brooklyn-based choreographer wunderkind Driscoll, who has gained raves for such productions as 837 VENICE BLVD. and WOW, MOM, WOW, premiered her Dance Theater Workshop commission There is so much mad in me this week, a challenging, exhilarating show that never lets up. Driscoll’s latest makes full use of the DTW space as characters march up and down the aisles, take seats in the house, climb side poles, and run between the light stanchions. Filled with uncomfortable humor, raw aggression, and an innate charm, There is so much mad in me examines Americans’ need to see and be seen in today’s overstimulated world, desperate to make emotional and physical connections amid heart-wrenching loneliness.

Supremely talented cast works out its issues in public in Faye Driscoll’s exhilarating DTW commission (photo by Yi-Chun Wu)

Supremely talented cast works out its issues in public in Faye Driscoll’s exhilarating DTW commission (photo by Yi-Chun Wu)

Driscoll demands much from her supremely talented cast, creating unusual, often spastic movements and long patches of dramatic dialogue that include scenes that place them on in-your-face talk shows and reality programs (think Oprah meets Jerry meets Tyra meets AMERICAN IDOL). An early duet between Nikki Zialcita and Michael Helland, two of the stars of 837 VENICE BLVD., announces that There is so much mad in me is going to be a very different kind of dance theater, and that continues with a gorgeous section in which Jesse Zaritt and Tony Orrico battle it out over Lindsay Clark, representing the private individual not sure how much she is willing to reveal in this ever-more-public society. When Adaku Utah grabs the microphone, she offers material gifts, and Jennie MaryTai Lau serves up lurid voyeurism, but Jacob Slominski deals out rage and fear. Making sophisticated sociocultural observations that comment on sexuality and violence, Driscoll never takes the easy way out, resulting in a fresh, original, touching, and powerfully direct experience.

THERE IS SO MUCH MAD IN ME

Faye Driscoll will show how much mad there is in her at DTW March 31 - April 3

Faye Driscoll will show how much mad there is in her at DTW in new evening-length piece

Dance Theater Workshop
219 West 19th St.
March 31 – April 3, $15
212-924-0077
www.dtw.org
www.fayedriscoll.com

Last December at the University Settlement and again in January at Dance Theater Workshop as part of the APAP conference, choreographer Faye Driscoll offered a sneak peek at her upcoming production, There is so much mad in me, featuring an exhilarating scene of beautiful chaos. The show makes its full-length debut at Dance Theater Workshop this week, running March 31 through April 3. Performed by Lindsay Clark, Lily Gold, Michael Helland, Tony Orrico, Jennie Mary, Tai Liu, Jacob Slominski, Adaku Utah, Jesse Zaritt, and Nikki Zialcita, There is so much mad in me examines the overstimulation prevalent in today’s society as people battle emotional extremes just to keep going.

Driscoll, who was included in the New Museum’s “Younger Than Jesus” exhibit highlighting the work of emerging artists under the age of thirty-three (her video from the show, “Loneliness,” can be seen above), incorporates a lot of dialogue into her pieces, not afraid to challenge conventions and rile up the audience. She has described her choreography as being “rebellious” and “dangerous,” and advance looks at There is so much mad in me hint that her latest should be no different. Opening night, March 31, will be preceded by a Coffee and Conversation with Driscoll, while the April 2 show will be followed by a discussion between Driscoll and Interdependence Project founder Ethan Nichtern, moderated by dance writer Deborah Jowitt.

ARMORY ARTS WEEK: SITE FEST ’10

sitefest2

Multiple locations in Bushwick
March 6-7, 1:00 – 9:00 (music continues past midnight)
Suggested donation for certain events $5, day pass $10, weekend pass $20
www.artsinbushwick.wordpress.com

For something a little different during Armory Arts Week, head out to Brooklyn for two days of open studios, gallery openings, live performances, and more at the second annual SITE Fest. Organized by Arts in Bushwick, the festival has three primary theater, dance, and performance art hubs — 3rd Ward on Morgan Ave., Chez Bushwick on Boerum St., and the Grace Exhibition Space on Broadway — while Goodbye Blue Monday will be home base for much of the live music, curated by ionSOUND. Among the performers scheduled to appear are Kung Fu Crimewave, Larkin Grimm, Meng-Hsuan Wu, Homunculus Mask Theater, Yoo & Dancers, Jenny Vogel, Synthesis Dance Project, HoverBound, the Movement Farm, Ling-Fen Chien, and the Omen Project. There will also be site-specific installations, interactive performances, artist talks, film screenings, sketch comedy, and panel discussions at such satellite sites as the Bushwick Starr, English Kills Gallery, the Petri Space, Bushwick Music Studios, House of Yes, Brooklyn Fireproof Gallery, and many others.

koosil-ja/danceKUMIKO

at DTW

Koosil-ja presents her latest technological innovations at DTW

BLOCKS OF CONTINUALITY / BODY, IMAGE, AND ALGORITHM
Dance Theater Workshop
219 West 19th St.
March 3-6, $15, 7:30
212-924-0077
www.dtw.org
www.dancekk.com

Born in Osaka to Korean parents and based in New York City for many years, dancer, composer, and choreographer Koosil-ja has staged such intriguing productions as mech[a]OUTPUT at the Japan Society, DANCE WITHOUT BODIES and memoryscan at the Kitchen, a shadow of forgotten ancestors at SummerStage, deadmandancing EXCESS at the Performing Garage, and deadmandancing HOTEL 2005 in a room at the Sheraton New York Hotel and Tower. Her works incorporate technological innovation with noh elements and cutting-edge music and sound, making every performance unique. “I can listen to my mind. You can see my body,” she writes obsessively on her Web site. Audiences will be able to see her body and more at Dance Theater Workshop, as Koosil-ja and her company, danceKUMIKO, present the New York premiere of BLOCKS OF CONTINUALITY / BODY, IMAGE, AND ALGORITHM, her latest examination of movement and the human body utilizing live processing, interactive computer programming, and 3D imaging, influenced by the conceptual theories of French philosopher and self-described “pure metaphysician” Gilles Deleuze. While that might sound like a lot to take in at one time, it has the potential to be one helluva mind-blowing experience. (The opening-night performance, March 3, will be preceded by a Coffee and Conversation gathering at 6:30, while the March 5 show will be followed by a talk with members of the cast and crew.)

IN THE WORDS OF DURAS

Marguerite Duras, Hall des Roches Noires, Trouville, 1982 (copyright Hélène Bamberger)

Marguerite Duras, Hall des Roches Noires, Trouville, 1982 (copyright Hélène Bamberger)

Cultural Services of the French Embassy, 972 Fifth Ave.
French Institute Alliance Français, 22 East 60th St.
Baryshnikov Arts Center, 450 West 37th St.
Anthology Film Archives, 32 Second Ave.
February 18 – March 18, free – $35
www.fiaf.org
www.frenchculture.org
www.bacnyc.org
www.anthologyfilmarchives.org

Born Marguerite Donnadieu in Indochina in 1914, French writer Marguerite Duras had a long career as a journalist, novelist, playwright, screenwriter, and director. A graduate of the Sorbonne who was raised in extreme poverty, she served in the French Resistance, was expelled from the Communist Party, suffered from alcoholism and hallucinations late in life, and spent her last years with writer Yann Andréa Steiner, who was nearly forty years her junior, before dying of throat cancer in Paris in 1996. Duras’s extraordinary life and work will be celebrated with a month of special events at locations around the city, from documentaries to discussions, avant-garde dance and theater to readings and an intimate photo exhibit. On February 18, the French Institute Alliance Français will host “Meet the Writer…en français,” a discussion with Duras biographer Jean Vallier ($15), followed by “Talk with Jean Vallier: Bringing Duras’s Word to the Stage” in English ($15). On February 26-27, ASTRID BAS DIPTYCH: THE LOVER AND LA MUSICA DEUXIÈME consists of stage productions, with music, of two seminal works by Duras ($35). And on March 6-7, Nicole Ansari, Winsome Brown, Joan Juliet Buck, and Sadie Jemmett star in Irina Brook’s play inspired by Duras’s LA VIE MATÉRIELLE and Virginia Woolf’s A ROOM OF ONE’S OWN ($35).

Astrid Bas presents a Duras diptych at FIAF as part of citywide celebration

Astrid Bas presents a Duras diptych at FIAF as part of citywide celebration

The Baryshnikov Arts Center will be presenting the U.S. premiere of L’HOMME ASSIS DANS LE COULOIR (THE MAN SITTING IN THE CORRIDOR), a dance created by Razerka Ben Sadia-Lavant based on the 1980 novella by Duras, performed by Sarah Crépin and Alexandre Dutronc (February 19-21, $20). From 1980 to 1994, photojournalist Hélène Bamberger and Duras spent summers together in Trouville; Bamberger’s photos of the author, collected as “Marguerite Duras par Hélène Bamberger,” will be on view February 18 – March 18 at the Cultural Services of the French Embassy. The exhibit opens on February 17 with bilingual readings by Kathleen Chalfant and William Nadylam (free but RSVP required at 212-439-1485, duras@frenchculture.org). On March 2, the Cultural Services of the French Embassy will be screening THE LOVER: FANSTASY OF A MOVIE, a documentary with Claude Berri and others about the film adaptation of THE LOVER, along with a discussion with French professor Sophie Bogaert (free, rsvp@frenchculture.org). One of Duras’s most well known works, HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR, will be presented onstage at BAC March 4-6, directed by Christine Letailleur and featuring Valérie Lang, Hiroshi Ota, and Pier Lamandé ($25). Duras was also a unique and experimental filmmaker; her directorial works will be shown in the series “Marguerite Duras on Film” at Anthology Film Archives March 12-18, including screenings of DESTROY, SHE SAID (DÉTRUIRE DIT-ELLE) (1969), NATHALIE GRANCER (1972), LE NAVIRE NIGHT (1979), INDIA SONG (1975), and THE TRUCK (LE CAMION (1977), which stars Duras with Gérard Depardieu. “The best way to fill time is to waste it,” Duras once famously said. You could do a lot worse than wasting plenty of time at this wide-ranging, exciting festival honoring one of the most intriguing literary figures of the twentieth century.