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House of No More

House of No More is the third and final part of a conceptual trilogy of Real Time Film begun with the works Shelf Life and Flicker. The performance starts with the reenactment of a crime told by a mother who thrusts herself on screen in her quest for her missing child. But simultaneously as this premise unfolds, the performers develop an antithesis– that the story is being faked as it is being created, dispelled at the same moment as it is conjured. As the characters dissolve into this corrupt transmission, becoming ghostly and multiplied across the surface of the “film,” what emerges is not a battle for the ownership of an absolute truth, but a thirst for a satiating lie.

The story of House of No More, as with all the parts of Real Time Film, is not told through the devices of conventional dialogue and narrative, but across an extended field of meaning in which the method of delivery contaminates the message. The image contradicts phrases, sounds obscure dialogue, the audience chooses what to see. The performance escapes across bounds: from creator to receiver, instigator to voyeur, it moves through states of being with an alarming and contemporary facility.

Intimacy in Transition

Intimacy in Transition
Culturebot, December 13, 2003
Chris Elam and Misnomer Dance Theater’s Intimacy In Transition opened at P.S. 122 on Thursday, December 11th. Elam, known for his whimsical, Balinese inspired choreography, has created an enchanting evening consisting of six different dances.

Elam’s dancers all possess extraordinary grace and athleticism, and his choreography pushes them not just physically, but emotionally as well. Each performer seems to be deeply invested in the characters behind the dance, and in this way the work has an immediacy and presence that makes the experience even more special.

Several themes recur throughout the evening. In Our Town Elam uses four women (Abbey Dehnert, Jennifer Harmer, Eliza Littrell and Laura Pocius) as an ensemble, evoking images of small-town life and referencing the themes and aesthetic of Thornton Wilder’s play of the same name. In a subsequent piece, Maggie and George, Elam and Abbey Dehnert do some wonderful work with what appear to be picture frames. The use of the frames allows them to create a sense of portraiture, as if bringing the painting American Gothic to life, or alternately using them as windows – bringing to mind the ladder scene between George and Emily in Wilder’s Our Town. These images of Americana play off the athletic choreography and attenuated movements to create that is both homespun and exotic.

Elam’s Balinese influence reveals itself most clearly in his solo, Tin Man and in the fantastical Ten Feet. In Tin Man Elam distorts his elongated body into any number of extraordinary poses. Even his face becomes a landscape of movement as his expressions widen as if possessed by a fearsome spirit. He makes excellent use of vocalized breathing as part of the character and the overall effect of the piece is otherworldy. So, too, in Ten Feet where the entire ensemble takes the stage garbed in red wool headresses with tufts running down their backs, like the back of an alligator or a dinosaur. They move in a pack and then separate, performing a series of different variations and combinations. I wanted to call them “crazy monkey people”, but that’s not really apropos. They were more like creatures from Where The Wild Things Are, but red. It was very fun and, in spots, funny.

Closing the evening is a playful duet featuring Abbey Dehnert and Amber Sloan entitled Dreams of Your Acceptance. The two entwine and disengage as restless sleepers fitfully sharing a bed. The connection of the performers is obvious as they play with each other, first competing in movement, then playing off of each other, creating variation. While I know the piece was meticulously choreographed, the performers brought a sense of novelty to it that made it seem spontaneous and free-form, like jazz.

At the end of the evening the audience was very enthusiastic – as they should have been.

Intimacy In Transition was a really rewarding evening of dance and Elam is a choreographer to watch. He has engaged many talented collaborators from the musicians who created the evening’s excellent score, to the costume designers, to his ensemble of gifted dancers. It will be interesting to see where Elam goes as a choreographer as he continues to mature and deepen.

https://www.misnomer.org/node/73

Solo Me

Solo Me is a solo for two performers – a performance in which two different choreographic solo materials, opinions, processes come in touch with each other. Although both solos were made separately and can be performed as such, the performance focuses on the idea of juxtaposition, adjoining and refraction of one material in another.

A Dream Deferred

Niles Ford’s unique hybrid of ballet, modern, jazz and street dance has earned him a reputation as an extraordinarily dynamic dancer/choreographer. A Dream Deferred unfolds like a hip, smooth and effervescent Marvin Gaye album, revisiting the questions posed in the Langston Hughes poem of the same name. This show investigates the cyclical patterns of war and racism through the lens of popular culture. Featuring music by Bjork, Marvin Gaye and Nina Simone as well as original spoken word, Niles Ford and his ensemble embark on a journey that inspires and celebrates new possibilities for the future.

Placid Baby

Smart, sympathetic and ensconced in plaid, Placid Baby refuses to take itself too seriously. Jennifer Allen, Sam Kim and Tania Varela Ibarra move to the riffs of Japanese pop, 70’s Kraut rock, and other musical surprises without inhibition, managing to cover a colossal range of action and reaction. With unflappable vitality, this show keeps on moving and developing into one gigantic THING in which irony and sincerity conspire to evoke empathy.

 

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