On Stage: Attack-ing the Center for the Arts

February 17, 2010

I joined Attack Theatre on the second leg of Assemble This, a series of improvisational performances at eight galleries, spaces and museums around the city. I would like to say I braved Pittsburgh’s snowy elements to attend, but the roads weren’t that bad. Traffic through Regent Square was, however, and, as a result, there were no parking places left in Pittsburgh Center for the Arts’ parking lots. (Actually it looked as if neighborhood residents took advantage of the plowed spaces.) I wound up at Ellis School and walked, whereupon I discovered that the PCA sidewalk hadn’t been shoveled.

As a result of all that, I was really late, but quickly warmed up to cellist Dave Eggar’s performance downstairs, full of spontaneity and good will, with percussionist Charles Palmer. Is there anything Big (as in talent) Dave can’t do? He took full advantage of the cello landscape — pizzicato (both guitar and upright styles), classical musings, pop, folk, soft rock, Latino. I loved the story about the airports and his question: Why does the cello, with its spear-like endpin, make it through security, when his rosin does not? Palmer sat on a box, which doubled as a drum, and had a few accessories to vary the accompaniment. The duo set the stage for what was to come.

I am probably one of the few to have seen Michele de la Reza and Peter Kope in their museum piece almost ten years ago. Some things remained the same — use three art works and have an audience to respond to a piece of art and determine where the performance will go.

At 30 or so participants, that made Attack bigger than Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre for the evening. And it made me realize that de la Reza and Kope have come so far since those Frick Museum days (although I’ll be able to make more of a comparison when they revisit the Frick on Friday).

Things were far more sophisticated and complicated, enough to frazzle my brain, let alone those of the performers, who, for the record, doubled the fun with Ashley Williams and Dane Toney. They began with an opening phrase and efficiently used a sandwich board to note changes. The audience was enthusiastic in its response  to Will Giannotti’s untitled canon-like piece and the dancers and musicans layered several improvisation onto the existing format, including one where Williams would “rise” whenever Palmer played the triangle.

They went upstairs to a Google Earth piece, Connie Cantor’s “Mystery as the Seed of Liberation.” Eggar and Palmer had a fun time with some new musical elements. I don’t know if it was the electricity of the partnership, but the room got decidedly warm.

Last was the pristine picket fence/sky/water of Jason Lee’s “Studies in Modern Euthenics,” where the ensemble toyed with some new elements, including that cello endpin. Back downstairs, the viewers got to see the fruits of their labor. Maybe the phrases weren’t quite the same, but the spirit of it all was there. This was dance in the moment — moments of brilliance, moments of whimsy,moments of danger (de la Reza and Williams were climbing chairs and tables to “rise”),  a couple of moments that had to backtrack, but all intelligently rendered to our delight. I was delighted to get a ride back to my car with the help of Attack’s general director, Donna Goyak. Attack always aims to please…

Well, onto the August Wilson Center tonight. If you’re coming, plan double the time to arrive at 7:30 and grab one of those hard-to-find parking spots. See you at the dance!


On Stage: Improv-ability

February 17, 2010

Improvisation is undeniably a part of the dance process — experimenting with, toying with, molding, sculpting a myriad of movements into some semblance of a structure. But what happens when the improv is the performance goal itself?

That idea has become attractive to several companies. The Pillow Project’s Pearlann Porter relies heavily on improvisation, noticeable in such projects as her street-wise “Urban Experiment” and her fifth anniversary celebration, “Sorta Saturday.” Attack Theatre is in the midst of an improv-based tour of Pittsburgh art galleries, spaces and museums.

And last weekend, Jeff Berman, playing vibraphone and dulcimer, joined with a few musicians (Tony Depaolis, bass, and Dave Throckmorton, percussion) joined with a few dancers (Pittsburgh improv queen Gia Cacalano, along with Allie Greene, Beth Ratas, and Erin Carey of Zany Umbrella Circus hanging out on the drapes).

Yes, Berman apparently initiated the project, simply called “2010,” a collection of movement, sound and film. It was inspired by the moment at hand…but with a little planning. After a brief prelude to introduce the idea, Berman talked a bit, calling the evening a “work-in-progress.”

Berman and Cacalano have been working together for several years and the two obviously share a connection, as evidenced in their latest duo, with Berman on vibraphone and Cacalano in tune. Like two opponents warming up, they cased the joint in front of a backdrop video of Cacalano’s feet.

The pair played a sophisticated game of cat and mouse, viewed Cacalano’s balancing echoed with repetitive motifs by Berman. Their connection brought the viewer into the zone, making time virtually stand still.

The ensemble segment, with full cast, featured themes whirling around whipping, rolling and running backwards. Although it’s more difficult to work with large group improv, there were moments of revelation against the shimmering video backdrop. Yet this ensemble shows promise and already announced a future performance in May.


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