It was as if the inmates were running the asylum in this Olympian endeavor. Or did they know something that we onlookers didn’t? Undoubtedly! And speaking of asylums, Amanda K. Ringger’s lighting design was always teed up, so to speak, on “high”—the brightness accentuating the frenzied, albeit highly choreographed, moves, ensuring that we onlookers were able to take in the sight of this company in all of its glory.
In one scene, the action radiated Kubrickian vibes, calling to mind his 1968 masterpiece, 2001: A Space Odyssey, particularly towards the end of “The Dawn of Man” segment where one of the apes realizes a bone can be used as a tool: Here, the life raft, now sprinkled with dirt, becomes a source of safety, while at the same time also suggesting fragility, spawning a new category of movement amid these catastrophe adjacent terpsichores!
Flowers were also strewn about (the stagehands were quick to swoop in and pick up the tossed items, including a credit card holder and keys), and, resembling an earth goddess, Shayla-Vie Jenkins, off-raft, was actually, well, vaping. As the soundscape grew louder, the theater, too, seemed to be an echo chamber, and amid the bedlam was Miguel Alejandro Castillo, who’d gone from fully clad to completely nude, careening off the “set” and coming perilously close to the audience. And with the mattress itself having been moved, front row attendees got up close and personal with the dancers, who, at one point, were lying/crawling around the floor.
Ah, but since the program notes warned that the piece “contains nudity and loud sounds,” with “limited amounts of essential oils [being] used within the show” (dramaturgy and scent design—?—by Dages Juvelier Keates), this writer was prepared. Or so she thought! After all, how does one prepare for a work that is both so disconcerting and yet so deeply enthralling, so wild and yet so contained, so far-reaching and yet so intimate?
The answer is simple: One does not! There can be no preparation, except to open one’s heart and mind to the possibility of having a life-altering experience that a dance such as Driscoll’s “Weathering” could—and did—provide.
Hi Victoria, I was sitting across you at that performance, watching you take notes and looking forward to what you would write. Thank you for so accurately lending words to what I experienced. It was magnificent!