Friday May 27, 2011 – From the many invitations that I receive each week to dance events, this one from The Neta Dance Company caught my eye because of the title of the work they are presenting: 2280 Pints! Described as a dancework for seventeen dancers and 57 5-gallon plastic buckets, it just sounded so quirky that I had to give it a go.
On entering the space at Dance Theater Workshop, we find the dancers posed like living statues as the music of Chopin’s second piano concerto fills the air. Each dancer has a white plactic bucket. Coins are distributed to the incoming audience members who then wander among the dancers, pressing pennies into the dancers’ open palms or dropping them into the buckets. A bell rings; suddenly the dancers break their poses and rush into the audience, grabbing people at random. Each dancer takes a guest onto the stage and arranges him/her in a statuesque pose. Thus did my friend Kokyat make his New York stage debut.
From there, a roller-coaster ride of movement and music commences. Neta Pulvermacher deploys her squad of dancers and their fifty-seven buckets in a richly imaginative series of danced and mimed tableaux, set to a musical smorgasbord that runs the gamut from Mozart to Sonny & Cher.
The buckets are arranged, stacked, knocked over, sent skidding across the floor; they become hats, shoes, podiums, spotlights, drums, sinks, stepping-stones; they are hoisted and lowered over the playing area. The dancers come and go as each musical number unfolds; sometimes there are big ensembles with everyone moving in unison and playing the buckets like percussionists kits. Other moments are more intimate: a girl sings the old Charlie Chaplin tune “Smile” (sings it really well, too) while four dancers simply raise and lower buckets over their faces, revealing their features as droll masks.
Does it sound like a mish-mash? To an extent, it is. What saves it and makes it brilliant is the musicality of Neta’s choreographic style and the sheer energy and commitment of her dancers. One or two segments seem to stretch out a bit long but at those times one can focus on the individual personalities of the very attractive young performers. A giant plus to the production comes from the lighting by B. Lussier.
I loved running into Taylor Gordon (either I go for months without seeing Taylor or I see her every day for a week) and to see Deborah Wingert and Matthew Westerby again. Many thanks to Alessandra Larson for inviting us to this really enjoyable evening.
2280 Pints! continues at Dance Theater Workshop (on West 19th off 8th Avenue) thru Saturday evening. Kids over 5 will get a kick out of it at a Saturday matinee. Details here, with a video trailer.
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