Archibald’s “Maslow’s Peak,” BalletX’s most ambitious work in its 19 years, stood in stark contrast to “Terra/Bodies & Territories.” Thanks to recent funding gifts, Guy De Lancey designed an elaborate set and projections to represent the jungle island that some 20 prep-school boys crash-land on in William Golding’s dystopian novel, The Lord of the Flies. Dozens of dangling ropes served as vines for the dancers to swing on, climb up or down, or simply sway, as if in a breeze, among them. The gorgeous, stylized Hollywood set included two halves of the small passenger air plane on each side of the stage. These broken, separated wings and a rough cliff provided multiple levels for the dancers to cling to, climb on or slide down.
The company relished the acrobatics, some of which looked exceedingly dangerous. Some scenes, especially those with Taiko drums beating, were heart stopping. As Golding depicted, most of the boys, (in this case the girls were also boys,) went native. They smeared mud on their bodies, wore masks, terrorized each other and lost all sense of civilization. Until they were rescued. In “Maslow’s Peak,” Archibald contrasts psychologist’s Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, which suggests we should be striving to meet our highest aspirations, with Golding’s depiction of the boys decent into a feral state.
Too short a description, but I want to add that I cannot think of another space large enough to present it again in Philadelphia. The Mann Music Center seats 4,500 in the TD Pavilion and another 9,500 on the Connelly Terrace and Great Lawn, where entire families come with blankets to picnic—just as my family walked up to the Robin Hood Dell which the Mann basically supplanted. It’s still nearby and Philadanco will perform there July 25th.
The Mann is now 50 years old and undergoing an extensive renovation, which I hope will include more thought for the disabled. Handrails on the steep slopes are currently inadequate and many of us struggled to get to the box office from the upper reaches and to our seats. The jumbotrons, intended to provide closeups of the dance and the dancers faces to audience on the grass, did little to give us the sense of intimacy with nature that Cardell’s “Terra” did.
This may have been the only venue where such a monumental show could have been produced locally. As BalletX celebrates its twentieth anniversary next season, my hope is that Archibald’s work can be freshly rebuilt at places like BAM and Vail, where the company often summers.
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