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  •  REVIEW: I DANCE

    I Dance

    The ravin', evermore

    "I Dance" is a tribute to the ecstatic culture of club kids, in dance, video and poetry.

    By SARAH CARLSON
    Offoffoff.com

    In an unabashed assertion of rave culture, "I Dance" serves up a multimedia feast of hip-hop, video shorts, spoken word, and techno titillation. Conceived and choreographed by Jenn Weber and Shira Yevin, the program is well-crafted and smart as it artfully spins the DJ-driven tale of one girl's night out clubbing.

      
    I DANCE
    Company: Decadance Theater.
    Choreography by: Jenn Weber and Shira Yevin.
    Dancers: Nicole Caporino, Michelle Mendoza, Bianca Soto, Krista Saunders, Jenn Weber, Shira Yevin, Prof Rockwell, Loren Suliveres.
     SCHEDULE
    University Settlement
    184 Eldridge Street
    Aug. 10-26, 2001

     RELATED ARTICLES
    Fringe Festival 2001

    • Overview
    • Show listings

    Theater
    • 21 Dog Years
    • Debbie Does Dallas
    • Doing Justice
    • Einstein's Dreams
    • The Elephant Man: The Musical
    • Equal Protection
    • Fifty Minutes
    • Fuck You or Dead Pee Holes
    • Gene de Tueur
    • L'Hiver Sous la Table
    • Imperative Flight
    • Jim Carroll's The Basketball Diaries
    • Loader #26
    • A Piece of My Heart
    • Sic
    • Snapshot
    • Take
    • Two Girls from Vermont
    • Woosh
    • Zoo

    Dance
    • Absolutely Abreast
    • Break the Floor
    • I Dance

    Art
    • Studio

    Other Fringe Festivals
    • Fringe 2000
    An introductory video sets the stage with beautiful NYC nightscapes and bursts forth into full, frontal unison dance. The all-female cast consisting of Nicole Caporino, Michelle Mendoza, Bianca Soto, Krista Saunders, Weber and Yevin, sizzle through the opening sequence in a wave of maddening movement. Mimicking music-video formations, the choreography is crisp, precise and fierce, if a bit derivative. Clad in an orange jumpsuit and appropriately cornered, Prof Rockwell is the ever-present DJ who drowns the space with his driving techno beat. Immersed in sound and tempted by the energized performers, the audience must resist the urge to rush the stage and join in the fun. What is it about dancing to oblivion in an obscure, accostingly loud room that can be so alluring? Exploring this question is what "I Dance" is all about.

    The girls queue to enter a club, dressed to the hilt in innovative, shapely red outfits designed by Cat Malik. A seductive bar dance, a moment of violation, a lesbian encounter; the program samples the entire spectrum of club/rave behavior and presents it without judgement. Although literal and at times contrived, the drama successfully conveys the erotic intensity of living in the moment.

    Loren Suliveres graces the stage several times with her luscious, poetic interludes. She is articulate and powerfully present as she gracefully imposes verbal order on the proceedings.

    The second half has a decidedly younger, teen-age feel with a shift to grunge-in-pigtails attire. An especially clever animated club video game adds a refreshing burst of humor and ushers in a series of prop-centered sequences. Glitter and light sticks mesmerize and work to inspire the drug-induced stupor of ecstasy, while flashlights aimed at the audience put a twist in the anonymous voyeurism we've enjoyed thus far.

    At first glance, the rave scene may appear to be nothing but an artificial reality offering superficial rewards. "I Dance" makes a thoughtful counter by affirming it as a place of freedom, sans judgement, a place where everything goes. Suliveres takes it one step further by describing the club scene as a "place where persona is multiplied by ten, so the people can be just them." Steeped in polished sensationalism, "I Dance" rises above its subject matter and presents the intriguing notion that sometimes we need to lose ourselves to find ourselves.

    AUGUST 21, 2001
    OFFOFFOFF.COM • THE GUIDE TO ALTERNATIVE NEW YORK


    Reader comments on I Dance:

  • Tanks!   from Prof. Rockwell, Aug 23, 2001
  • amazing   from Cari Rosner, Aug 23, 2001
  • Re: amazing   from Martha Gal, Aug 24, 2001
  • i dance   from eric, Aug 26, 2001
  • review   from Roger, Aug 27, 2001
  • esquisite taste of clubculture   from anthony avery, Jan 2, 2002
  • mermaid!   from Van Driver, Mar 31, 2002
  • related   from luis suliveres, May 14, 2003
  • Re: related   from Loren Suliveres, Sep 24, 2004

  • Post a comment on "I Dance"