Weis is a choreographer, performer, and video artist whose experimental performance work has won her a Bessie Award and a Guggenheim Fellowship. As a young dancer, Weis danced for the Louisville Ballet and attended Bennington College then “played in a cello quartet, tap danced on the streets of San Francisco, and did a stint as a disco queen.” She moved to New York in the 1980s and bought her current apartment—which she dubbed WeisAcres—in 2005 from postmodern dancer Simone Forti.
“Simone wanted to keep [the loft] in the dance community, and whenever she was back in New York, she could stay here,” Weis said.
Forti was one of a number of postmodern, improvisational dancers who occupied the Broadway lofts in the 1970s. Trisha Brown, Lucinda Childs, David Gordon, Frances Alenikoff, Elaine Summers, Douglas Dunn, and others all lived and created there.
“They were all right here” Weis said. “You'd just go down the hall and see what what’s-her-name was working on. There was a cross pollination going on.”
“Sundays on Broadway” is not necessarily an effort to recreate the salons of the past, but its mission is similarly to provide a space as intimate where artists can mingle and network while sharing work at multiple stages of development, particularly given the fact that many of these opportunities have disappeared.
“The ’70s was an absolutely unique cultural situation,” said Douglas Dunn, who with Brown, Gordon, and others was a founding member of the improvisational group Grand Union and has his own company, Douglas Dunn and Dancers. Dunn still lives in Weis’ building, “across the wall,” and occasionally hosts his own salons.
“This neighborhood, SoHo, was completely empty. That's why people like me, and a lot of painters, moved in—secretly, at first—to these beautiful big spaces and used them as studios. Then, so many people did that, that it became a bit of a scene. There were all kinds of artists, and we all hung out together.”
Dunn said there were parties every night, gatherings which were not only social, but artistic.
“You’d go to somebody]s loft and somebody would end up playing the piano or dancing,” Dunn said. “They were ‘culture’ parties.”
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