danceviewnewyork The
DanceView Times, New York edition |
Kid
Stuff
If
You Go Down To the Woods Today by
Susan Reiter Choreographed by Helene Blackburn, whose bio outlines a 20-year career, If You Go Down to the Woods Today is an unsubtle exploration of the fears that children—and all of us—are prey to. The five dancers present a childlike manner without being cloying (the three men are particularly adept at appearing goofy and sweetly awkward), and they invest the thin material with earnest sincerity and rambunctious energy. The stage is stripped bare of wings, with the back wall exposed, and a thin layer of small leaves is strewn across it. The dancers introduce themselves to us by announcing what they are afraid of: the dark, monsters under the bed, airplanes, weird noises, monsters under the bed, thunder. The begin to move with rapid, mechanistic unison gestures while remaining in place, before the piece opens up to brief individual sections, mostly set to excerpts from Paganini's 24 Caprices for Violin. The more intriguing types of fears that are suggested—of being different, of being misunderstood—are not really explored, since the blunt and straightforward movement vocabulary would not easily lend itself to such concepts. There are some weakly post-modern touches, such as a pouty dancer insisting she's not going to do her solo today, before launching into it, or a group discussion and vote about whether to do the finale, that don't add much and may have confused the kids. The engaging performers are well-suited to this kind of let's-play-games and pretend we're kids style of presentation, and did what they could with the oddly-shaped piece. There was a constant sense of stop-and-start, and it never developed its own momentum. It turned out to be a good thing that among of the generally well-behaved kids in attendance there was one who was uninhibited and quite vocal from time to time. When the performance reached its inconclusive conclusion, which did not immediately register as the end, he helpfully and loudly announced, before the lights came up for the final bows, "it's over." The show continues through March 7. Photos by Gadi Dagon. Originally
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