Feminine Mystique
Dresses, domestic chores, grief. A community of women more feral than feminine. Five performers wear a changing selection of 40 dresses that serve as both costume and prop.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
In Trisha Brown's 1983 “Set and Reset,” dancers float in and out of the wings like bubbles. Their swinging arms and bobbing heads bounce playfully in and out of the floor and in and out of each other, with groups forming then dissipating like clouds of mist. They seem to walk on air and literally on walls (see the dance's opening scene, where a woman is carried sideways, her feet gliding across the upstage scrim). Laurie Anderson's iconic score, “Long Time No See,” casts its titular words like a spell, and the audience is transported into a shining, delicate, ephemeral universe where movement ripples across the stage as water does beneath a skipping stone.
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Dresses, domestic chores, grief. A community of women more feral than feminine. Five performers wear a changing selection of 40 dresses that serve as both costume and prop.
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