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Theater Review:
NIGHT MARSH Our Rating: Year: 2004 Studio: Dandelion Dance Theater Director/Choreographer:Eric Kupers A long tradition of dancing nude exists in the theater, and a diverse group of artists performed completely naked at the Electric Lodge Theatre in Santa Monica for three performances on June 19-21, 2004. What made this 14-person dance ensemble unique is the performers were not just the typical pencil-thin dancers one might have expected. The body types came in all shapes and sizes, colors, sexualities, and the age range also spread across several decades. The play came to the Los Angeles area after three years of evolution at the San Francisco Dandelion Dance Theatre. The show performed to sold-out houses at the Mondavi Center at U.C. Davis in May. All three Los Angeles performances were also sold out.
According to the playbill, Night Marsh is One particularly moving number, "Recollections of a Hapa Cowgirl," choreographed by the fantastically expressive Kimiko Guthrie is a riveting ride, presenting the All-American family and its dark secrets showed bodies stacked in heaps, bearing a striking resemblance to the recent prisoner atrocities reported in Iraq. Other dance numbers and acting vignettes ran the gamut from sublimely soft-lighted to an absurdly improvisational butt-wiggling chorus and a breast-flapping solo.
Choreographer Eric Kupers, himself one of the performers, said he encountered "incredible shame and aversion" during auditions.
Kupers said he was drawn to the challenge of designing a dance performance without clothes because
The title Night Marsh came from Kuper's idea of meshing the normal with what might first be judged as messy and gross. Certainly the popularity of the show and the enthusiasm of the critics indicates Kuper may be on to something. Night Marsh is a liberating reminder of the simple beauty of the human figure, regardless of shape. That alone makes the experience worthwhile. |
Review by Gary Mussell, SCNA Theater Critic
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