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Which
Way is Up?
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| Tappin'
at the UO. PHOTO MICHAEL BRINKER HOFF |
Leave it to a couple of grad students to ask why
performers have to face front. If the space could be redefined,
well, think of the possibilities: Lines between "performer" and
"audience" dissolve, the theater is stripped of some of its trappings
and dance-making can happen in 360 degrees. The resulting anti-gravity,
upside-down tap dance would make Fred Astaire proud.
In "(mis)adventures in Gormandizing," UO graduate
students Gina Bolles and Carrie Goodnight feature 21 student and
community dancers as well as collaborations with composers Christian
Cherry, John Polese and Mei-Ling Lee and visual artists Ian Coronado
and Melinda Yale. The evening-length work is comprised of distinct
pieces, meant to hang fluidly together as a whole.
In "Perspective" and "Perspective Shift," Bolles
and Goodnight look at the public face of performance: stage front,
where performer engages audience and the division between doer and
watcher is clear, and compare it to the more private, pedestrian
life of the wings, the sidelines, where another backstage dance
unfolds, usually off-limits to audiences.
Pushing boundaries a little farther, "Schizmogenesis"
pits performers against "digital dancers" using video-technology,
sometimes distorting and obscuring the three-dimensionality of the
human body.
See these, and other orientation-defying works,
performed in the Dougherty Dance Theatre on the third floor of Gerlinger
Annex on the UO campus on Friday, Nov. 16, and Saturday, Nov. 17,
at 8 pm. Tix available at the door; for more information, call 346-3386.
— Rachael Carnes
Choral
Madness! Lust! Love! Nature!
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| Brian
Asawa, tenor |
That's right, the Eugene Symphony takes on Carl
Orff's Carmina Burana. The perhaps most-performed choral
music in the country (it's in a dead heat with Beethoven's Ninth,
according to choral expert Judith Clurman) shows off little kids,
college youth and community folk with good voices (the Eugene Symphony
Chorus and the Youth Chorus) singing alongside the orchestra. Soloists
for Carmina are Elizabeth Norman, Brian Asawa and Robert
Orth.
The show begins with Beethoven-obsessed Giancarlo
Guerrero conducting Beethoven's Sixth Symphony, the Pastoral (familiar
from the first Fantasia). Then the parents will stream in
the doors at intermission for Carmina, a wonderful mix of
earthy, lusty movements and the trauma of our fortune-tossed lives.
Tix are few and far between though the symphony opened up the pit
and has begged subscribers to turn in any unused tix. Head for the
Hult when the box office opens at 7 pm Thursday, Nov. 15, to see
if you can pick some up for the 8 pm show. $15-$69. — Suzi
Steffen
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