Originally published Saturday, November 15, 2008 at 12:00 AM
The Arts
Phffft!
kicks off international dance fest in Seattle
Phffft!
Dance Theater, Spectrum Dance Theater, MACHiNENOiSY Dance Society and others
dance across borders in Seattle this weekend.
By Michael Upchurch
Special
to The Seattle Times
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Last
year when Seattle-based choreographer Cyrus Khambatta decided to throw an
international dance festival, he showcased work from five countries.
This
year he doubled it to 10.
The
festivities opened Friday with a sampler from four of those countries: the
U.S.A. (new work from Khambatta's Phffft! Dance Theater Company), Canada
(MACHiNENOiSY Dance Society), Sweden (a surreal dance film called "Black
Spaghetti") and Israel/Palestine (in collaboration with Seattle's Spectrum
Dance Theater).
And
that's just the tip of the iceberg. From 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday and
Sunday (Nov. 15-16), Seattle Center's Center House will be a hotbed of dance
activity, featuring everything from video installations to interactive
performance to straightforward dance.
Friday's
program at Broadway Performance Hall (which repeats 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 16)
boded well for the festival as a whole. The most satisfying portion? Phffft!'s
"The People's Project," taking inspiration from videotaped dance
suggestions from four sources: a surfer couple, a recent divorcée, a
"serial entrepreneur," and Phffft!
dancer Chris McCallister.
McCallister — who on video recalled dancing
as a kid to any sound around him, including the washing machine — came up with
a fizzy, intricate trio for three plainly garbed women enduring some dangerous
encounters with red stiletto heels. McAllister used crisply phased movement,
parodied peepshow swagger and cleverly timed blackouts as he built up the
piece. The result was both frothy and bracing.
Khambatta
choreographed the other three sections, working special magic with a duet for
wooden chair and dancer Morgan Nutt, who took her cue from the notion that there's
nothing as lonesome as feeling all alone inside a marriage.
Newcomer
Nutt made strong impressions elsewhere too, notably in a supple solo in
Khambatta's witty take on "serial entrepreneurism." The entire
Phffft! company demonstrated smooth partnering skills and fluid ensemble work
that belied the strength and precision timing they took to execute.
Vancouver's
MACHiNENOiSY are a duo who mixed text and movement in a piece called "Self
Less." The fragmented text, blending playground memories and contemporary
urban angst, was ho-hum — but the body language wasn't. The interlacing of
tumbling limbs and torsos revealed two performers who know each other inside
out.
Phffft!
and MACHiNENOiSY also delivered a collaboration, "Un/Common Ground,"
a nicely crafted bauble whipped up in six hours. Five dancers in tight
formation shuffled, twitched and just generally stayed busy, while three
wild-card figures cut disruptive trajectories through their midst.
Goofier
still was Johan Forsman and Lea Martini's film, "Black Spaghetti,"
which asked, among other questions: Why won't broccoli stand up and act like a
tree when you want it to?
Spectrum
closed the show with a brief excerpt from its upcoming "Chekhovian
Resolution" inspired by the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In this
collaboration between Spectrum artistic director Donald Byrd, Israeli
choreographers Nir Ben Gal and Liat Dror and Palestinian composer-musician
Wissam Murad, four couples made exacting use of rectangular space. The always
amazing Hannah Lagerway again proceeded as if all human bodies (Patrick
Pulkrabek's in this case) were meant for her to climb.
Look for
more on "A Chekhovian Resolution" in this coming Friday's paper.
Michael
Upchurch: mupchurch@seattletimes.com
Copyright ©
2008 The Seattle Times Company
Originally
published Saturday, November 15, 2008 at 12:00 AM