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.
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