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Revenge
of the Otaku Japanese Choreography and Art in New York Solo/Duo:
Showcase for Emerging Japanese Dancer/Choreographers Little
Boy: The Arts of Japan’s Exploding Subculture by
Tom Phillips
Otaku like to work alone, and two of the three works presented Friday were solos by the choreographers. The most striking was an “Anatomical Experiment” by Natsuko Tezuka, an artist who conducts movement workshops for the disabled, and who has appropriated their movements to dramatize her own and her culture’s struggle to live. Dressed as a demure schoolgirl, she begins flat on her back, fighting to control even the tiniest movements. In stages, she struggles to sit, and then to kneel. The piece turns on a bizarre rite of passage, a mock Japanese tea ceremony. A stagehand comes out with a flat tray and a cup of hot tea; with tremendous effort, she seizes it, shaking most of it out of the cup, but managing to bring it to her mouth and drink. Exit stagehand. Then, to a sentimental American ballad, “Love Letters” she forms her mouth into a O of desire, and reaches out, as the song says, “straight from the heart.” Rising to her feet at last to a Sonny Rollins tune, she begins to dance, first with spastic wiggles, then flinging her arms high during a drum solo. The stagehand returns, this time with a glass of beer. Once again she grabs it awkwardly, spills half of it, but brings it to her mouth and drinks. In the split second before the lights go out you can sense a rush of relief, the idea that this girl has risen to where she can “drink the cup,” partake in life. Downtown, in the Union Square subway station, computer artist Chiho Aoshima has a multi-panel display titled “Paradise.” This Eden looks like an psychedelic Disney cartoon, with blue skies and lush vegetation, peopled by tiny naked girls with butterfly wings, surrounded by snakes, lizards and insects. In one panel, a tiny girl stands balanced precariously at the tip of a leaf, with a hungry-looking lizard crawling up the leaf toward the defenseless figure. Hello Kitty cannot escape Godzilla! By the way, both of these popular legends are prominently featured in the show, which draws no distinction between commercial and fine art. The art exhibit continues through July 24. Also on the bill was a duo by a man and woman who seemed to be satirizing middle-class Japanese domestic life. They barely glance at each other as they go through an elaborate set of motions, including lots of bowing and moving furniture around the stage. The funniest part is a slapstick series of ceremonial gestures and pratfalls, to the music of Mendelssohn’s Wedding March. Ballet-trained Misako Terada is a riveting dancer, flexible and graceful but able to suddenly flop out of control and crash face-first onto the floor, the gesture with which she begins and ends this low-key farce. She also has a great expression of isolated exasperation, contrasting with the stone-faced stoicism of her partner, Osamu Jareo. The last piece on the program was cancelled because of an injury to dancer/choreographer Yukiko Amano. In true Otaku style, she sent a cute letter by video from Tokyo, with many apologies (“I can’t performance”) in pastel pen, and a childish drawing of herself with an injured knee. “So sorry!” was once a stereotyped Japanese expression of politeness. Now, it comes to us with an edge of irony that makes it ah, so much more interesting. Photos: Volume 3,
No. 20
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