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Squaring the Circle

I’m not weathering well. Are you? Individually and globally, it seems to me the last five years left many of us in a vague sort of freefall, in a theatrum mundi that becomes more and more desperate. In her epic work “Weathering,” Faye Driscoll and her collection of twelve dancers, diverse in age, costume, demeanor, and expression, embody the tensions of the recent past and right up to the moment. It begins in a frieze frame dance that purposefully disintegrates in imagery of fear, death, indifference, heroism, war, and ranges between touching gestures to bordering on bestial behavior like biting or hands raised in fists.

Performance

Faye Driscoll: “The Weathering”

Place

The Philadelphia Fringe Festival, Philadelphia, PA, September 4, 2025

Words

Merilyn Jackson

Faye Driscoll's “The Weathering.” Photograph by Kevin Monko

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One by one the dancers entered and precipitously stepped, leapt, or carefully crawled, onto the massive white memory foam square designed by Jake Margolin and Nick Vaughan. It could have been a bed, of course, or an island, a flat earth, a merry-go-round, a playpen, a canvas, the blank page, or even that boat we’re all in. Once on the surface, with their feet sinking into it, they held onto each other to keep their balance—a hand on another’s shoulder, or gripping a backpack, pulling on a belt or a collar, or grabbing at each other’s forearms. Once they established balance and tension, the poses and facial expressions froze. For an excruciating ten minutes.

The performance opened the 28th annual Philadelphia Fringe Festival at the FringeArts theater next to the Ben Franklin Bridge. At times I felt like we were in a bomb shelter. The occasional faint rumble of the trains crossing the bridge high above sounded like distant thunder or the hum of planes wafting over the groans, whimpers, gasps, snorts, hisses, or snarls of the cast, amped up by the sound designers, Ryan Gamblin and Cordey Lopez. They created a hot spot in the main performing area with four high-end shotgun mics that could be ratcheted up or down to create the sonic immersion we experienced. Mics under the massive square stage cushion allowed us to hear, not only the breathing of the performers, but the physical environment itself blending with them.

Under Sophia Brous’s sound and music direction they called out words flatly as in a Gregorian chant: Vein, diaphragm, skin, hormones, beautiful, sorrow, tongue. The words built louder, faster. When they come out singing O Fascia, O Breathe, O Touch, O Itch, I'm thinking Carl Orff and Carmina Burana:

O Fortuna . . . the fickleness of fortune and wealth, the ephemeral nature of life, the joy of the return of spring and the pleasures and perils of drinking, gluttony, gambling, and lust.

Faye Driscoll's “The Weathering.” Photograph by Kevin Monko

Bathed in Amanda K. Ringger’s wrestling-ring bright lighting, Jennifer Nugent’s mouth grotesquely draws down to the left as if in a stroke, drooling. She wears an oversized green raincoat by costumer, Karen Boyer, which later snapped apart revealing a breast. Wrapped in a brown puffy coat, Mykel Marai Nairne stared blankly off into space. The nightmarish facial expressions on each dancer recalled scenes from Bruegel the Elder’s The Triumph of Death, with its torture instruments, and depictions of the Black Plague.

For what seems an eternity, no one bats an eye, until barely perceptible smiles creep in, eye contact and slight turns begin to surface, yet all the while the group has not broken physical contact.

When they separate, they begin to remove clothing, backpacks, boots, from one another. These acts of perceived self-preservation turn to desire to desperation to anarchy. Cory Seals lies serenely amid this mayhem peeling and eating an orange, tossing the peels to the floor. I look at the orange and think of the pineapple in Twyla Tharp’s 1981 “Catherine Wheel.” She says its spokes are like the spokes in the Catherine Wheel. So are those in an orange cut between ends.

Stage hands arrived, taking opposite corners of the foam square and turning it, circling the square with increasing speed. The dancers’ balance on the soft surface became ever riskier. Intermittently, they spray us with a scented liquid. By now the dancers have also removed objects from pockets and backpacks: a brick, rope, vape, tangled earbuds (is there any other kind), mirror, eye make-up. Nugent emerges from the pileup of bodies with a medieval chainmail hood. Amy Genux (who doubles as artistic and administrative assistant to Driscoll) shreds what looks like parsley, exploding it all over the scene so it falls like glitter in a snow globe. 

Faye Driscoll's “The Weathering.” Photograph by Kevin Monko

By now a couple of the dancers have taken over the spinning of the foam block with dizzying speed. Somehow the remaining crew keeps its balance or jumps off and on again.

Like frustrated moms in a teenager’s room, Driscoll and the stage hands rush out, scooping up the detritus and tossing it all under the seats. A now naked Miguel Alejandro Castillo runs the corners from mic to mic shouting garbled words I can’t quite catch. Once more Breugel the Elder’s Tower of Babylon comes to mind. 

Driscoll takes a seat as the action winds down with the tempo of a carousel or a Wheel of Fortune coming to a stop. Castillo rushes to kneel at her feet, his head on her lap. She caresses his hair tenderly. I think of the Pietà. “Weathering” is an ekphrastic, Muybridge-like, slo-mo of flashing images of hundreds of the great works of art depicting anguish, and yes, even her own predecessors in dance.

Its 70 minutes evokes the passage of time and tribulation over millennia. You could think of the Big Bang (possibly not a catastrophe,) the Crusades, the Holocaust, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 9/11 or Gaza and Ukraine, the pandemic, or climate change. Catastrophic events continue to occur since Driscoll’s masterwork premiered in 2023. You could even think of America’s current ICE Age. Whatever country you’re reading this in, it could soon be coming to you.

“Weathering” is an acutely conceptualized and realized work of art. Next stop is Japan in October, and then on to Paris in November. In the theater of the world, you can reinvent the wheel.

Merilyn Jackson


Merilyn Jackson has written on dance for the Philadelphia Inquirer since 1996 and writes on dance, theater, food, travel and Eastern European culture and Latin American fiction for publications including the New York Times, the Warsaw Voice, the Arizona Republic, Phoenix New Times, MIT’s Technology Review, Arizona Highways, Dance Magazine, Pointe and Dance Teacher, and Broad Street Review. She also writes for tanz magazin and Ballet Review. She was awarded an NEA Critics Fellowship in 2005 to Duke University and a Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Fellowship for her novel-in-progress, Solitary Host.

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