Ce site Web a des limites de navigation. Il est recommandé d'utiliser un navigateur comme Edge, Chrome, Safari ou Firefox.

Sensing Loss

A room, its furniture haphazardly stacked. The armchair lies toppled, the door, placed flat like a table-top, is reimagined as a bed; the cupboards become miniature doorways or upstairs windows through which the company climb.

Performance

Stopgap: “The Enormous Room”

Place

Lilian Bayliss Studio Theatre, Sadler's Wells, London, UK, March 2 & 3, 2017

Words

Rachel Elderkin

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.

Already a paid subscriber? Login

Within this disordered environment a family’s story unravels. There’s no specific narrative—instead, through recollected memories and passing vignettes the grainy image of a tragic event is formed. Piece by piece it gains clarity—the loss of a wife and mother, drawn from the emotional turmoil of the husband and daughter she has left behind.

As they come to terms with their loss we witness moments both bittersweet and tortured. Both David Toole, as the father, and Hannah Sampson, as the daughter, bring a sense of painful realism to their roles. Emotion can be read in every expression, movement and gesture they perform. The atmosphere they build is tense and tortured but there’s also a great tenderness between them.

It’s an atmosphere enhanced by the physical presence of the wife and mother they mourn, played by Meritxell Checa and Amy Butler respectively. Sometimes the duo move about the room, enacting past actions and habits through their stilted, gestural choreography; sometimes, as Toole recalls their time together, we see brief moments of interaction between mother and daughter, husband and wife.

Through this duplicate presence we are offered a glimpse into the different experience of grief for husband and daughter. It’s an original and affecting choice that subtly reflects on the varying roles one person might play in their day to day life. Among the sense of loss and frustration her presence lends the work a great sensitivity, exposing a close and caring connection between the performers.

The ability of this company to fully embody their characters is one of the great strengths of this piece but that strength also lies in its intelligent simplicity. Nothing is over-complicated and all is conducted with acute precision; from Toole’s spoken recollection of events to the company’s unadorned, but affecting movement language.

The confines of Anna Jones' set design are equally used to great effect. No surface is left untouched—the interiors of cupboards, the space around and under the table—it all adds a fascinating intricacy to the company’s movement. As they work their way around this topsy-turvy environment the eye flits between moments and scenarios. Like the room these characters inhabit the memories we see are scattered. It creates the distinct sense of two people piecing their lives back together—as best they can.

As in life, the tension of the characters’ existence inside this room cannot be sustained. As Chock (Nadenh Poan), a playful sprite-like figure, wheels around the space, the set is rapidly deconstructed and the theatricality of the first half gives way to the abstraction of movement. The stark change takes some adjustment but the absence of the room allows for the connections and relationships established in the first half to develop.

The pathways of the company’s movement revolve around one another, their actions supportive and connected. We gain an impression of past relationships and also developing ones, such as that between the daughter and boyfriend figure Tom (Christian Brinklow). Sometimes the company dance in unison, but more often their movements fall in and out of sync as their pathways cross one another. Translated upon the different bodies of the company the choreography gains its own textures and complexities and that adds a captivating aesthetic.

Above all, it is the emotional embodiment of not only this choreography but each action and expression that makes “The Enormous Room” so compelling. In that there is a very natural humanity, a sense of experience and emotion that, on some level, any audience member can relate to. This ability to portray genuine emotion makes “The Enormous Room,” and this company’s work, profound and touching.

Rachel Elderkin


Rachel Elderkin is a freelance dance artist and writer based in London. She is a contributor to The Stage and a member of the UK's Critics' Circle. She has previously written for publications including Fjord Review, Exeunt, British Theatre Guide, londondance.com, the Skinny (Scotland) and LeftLion (Nottingham) where she was Art Editor.

comments

Featured

Lists of Promise
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

Lists of Promise

“Lists of Promise,” a new work currently in a two-week run from March 13- 30 at the East Village cultural landmark, Theater for the New City, promised more than it delivered, at least for now.

Plus
Heady Notions
REVIEWS | Karen Hildebrand

Heady Notions

“State of Heads” opens with a blaze of white light and loud clanking onto a white-suited Levi Gonzalez, part Elvis, part televangelist addressing his congregation. A pair of women sidle in—Rebecca Cyr and Donna Uchizono—dressed in ankle-length white dresses and cowered posture.

Plus
Winning Works
REVIEWS | Róisín O'Brien

Winning Works

The late John Ashford, a pioneer in programming emerging contemporary choreographers across Europe, once told me that he could tell what sort of choreographer a young artist would turn into when watching their first creations.

Plus
Ballet at 41° South
REVIEWS | Leila Lois

Ballet at 41° South

Last weekend, the Royal New Zealand Ballet hosted two nights of performance in collaboration with the Scottish Ballet at the St. James’ Theatre in Wellington, New Zealand. The bill included two works by choreographers affiliated with Scottish Ballet, and two by RNZB choreographers. There was welcome contrast in timbre and tempo, and common themes of self-actualisation and connection, through a love of dance. As RNZB artistic director Ty King-Wall announced in the audience address, the two-night only performance was in the spirit of “bringing the companies together in mutual admiration and respect.”

Plus
Good Subscription Agency