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Testing Assumptions

The current global zeitgeist of uncertainty and the tendency to jump to judgment inspired veteran dancer-choreographer Beth Corning's latest dance-theater work, “Foolish Assumptions.” The hour-long duet, performed by Corning and dancer Evan Fisk, invited the audience to wade into a pool of their own perceptions as they watched the 71-year-old Corning and the 31-year-old Fisk's onstage personas move through quiet vignettes informed by the everyday.

Performance

CorningWorks and The Glue Factory Projects: “Foolish Assumptions”

Place

George Rowland White Theatre, Point Park University, Pittsburgh, May 22, 2026

Words

Steve Sucato

Beth Corning and Evan Fisk in “Foolish Assumptions.” Photogarph by Frank Walsh, courtesy of CorningWorks

The introspective work was an exercise in the economy of movement and stagecraft, beginning with the two performers seated in chairs on opposite sides of a mostly bare, black-and-white stage, their backs to the audience. The pair sat in silence for two and a half minutes before Corning began the first of several solos dancing to Meredith Monk's 2025 song “Happy Woman.” 

With the stage in darkness, save a square of light surrounding her, Corning rose from and then slowly sank down into her chair again before leaving it behind to slowly circle round it, executing simple gestural movements, including making undulating waves with one hand in the air, folding her arms around her head, and gingerly walking backward with her hands tight to her chest and cheek as if a shield against oncoming despair.   

Then, like a tennis match where the ball was the pendulum-like stage light illuminating a single side of the stage at a time (created by lighting designer extraordinaire Iain Court), the performers took turns dancing solos that invited comparison. Corning's were meticulous and somewhat cryptic; at one point, her hands shook nervously, and at another, she rigorously whipped her chair round in a circle. Fisk's solos leaned into his youthful playfulness and athleticism, with him dancing about and snaking up and down his chair like a gymnast on apparatus. 

Beth Corning and Evan Fisk in “Foolish Assumptions.” Photogarph by Frank Walsh, courtesy of CorningWorks

Beth Corning and Evan Fisk in “Foolish Assumptions.” Photogarph by Frank Walsh, courtesy of CorningWorks

Like most of Corning's dance works of the last few decades, “Foolish Assumptions” dealt in symbolism and metaphor to address its underlying theme of how we see things and whether we are aware of where our assumptions come from. Also like those works, “Foolish Assumptions’s” true brilliance came from the spellbinding stage presence and nuanced performances of its cast and the sophistication of its production elements.

With the stage then fully lit, perceptions of the relationship between Corning and Fisk, and of each as an individual, persisted. The pair swapped costumes back and forth, with Corning neatly folding her removed garments and Fisk tossing his with disregard. The two then took a meal break, during which the opposite occurred: Fisk was the model of decorum and etiquette, while Corning was ill-mannered, devouring a cup of yogurt with her fingers, including a dollop that had fallen onto the floor. 

The work concluded with the two performers finally coming together for a close-quartered duet in which Corning climbed atop Fisk, and vice versa, and the two lay still on a chair and on the floor. The work's final image showed the pair back, sitting quietly in their chairs this time facing the audience to receive their appreciative applause.

Steve Sucato


Steve Sucato is a former dancer turned arts writer/critic living in Cleveland, Ohio. His writing credits include articles and reviews on dance and the arts for the Plain Dealer, Buffalo News, Erie Times-News, Dance Magazine, Pointe, Dance International, and web publications Critical Dance, DanceTabs (London). Steve is chairman emeritus of the Dance Critics Association and the creator of the arts website artsair.art

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