Boal was wise to choose one post-Kylian work to propel us into the NDT-influenced near present, and to choose Ekman’s “Cacti.” For a good chunk, “Cacti” seems to be all play with theatrical devices, as Ekman skewers one contemporary stage cliche after another—topless-appearing costumes for both men and women, check; strobe lights, check; moving big white squares a la Forsythe’s “One Flat Thing, Reproduced,” check. But after the long section of dancers on separate wooden platforms, along comes the dance-y good stuff: a duet between the excellent Christian Poppe and Sarah-Gabrielle Ryan, with the couple’s inner thoughts—whether they should break up—heard in voiceover, replete with a falling dead cat.
The music for “Cacti” is by Haydn, Beethoven, and Schubert, arranged with creepy funhouse-like interludes by Andy Stein, and delivered onstage by the string quartet of Alexander Grimes, Michael Jinsoo Lim, Jennifer Caine Provine, and Page Smith as they weave through the action. The satirically pretentious text by Spenser Theberge tells us that the titular cacti held by the dancers holds the subtext for the dancers on pedestals. (“There was rejoicing, yes, and youthful exuberance—a duality of freedom and imprisonment. But will they ever know the realities of rough, ever-breathing soil?”)
To be honest, I don’t know that I’ve ever been brainy enough to qualify as the kind of critic being skewered here, and I’m left with a strange kind of envy. As for Ekman’s methods of criticizing the criticism, I can’t help thinking of Marco Goecke rubbing dog shit on the face of his reviewer after an NDT premiere last year. Thick irony is certainly the more elegant tactic, and I’ll take it any day.
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