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![]() Dance Preview: 'Get Out of the House' puts dancers on the street
Thursday, September 05, 2002 By Jane Vranish
It's a dance designed to stop traffic -- literally.
Dance Alloy will premiere "Get Out of the House" by New York City
choreographer Sarah Skaggs today at an intersection in East Liberty near
the Kelly-Strayhorn Community Performing Arts Center.
The dancers won't be doing a dangerous pas de deux with passing
vehicles; a block of Penn Avenue will be closed to traffic. Instead, this
will be an inviting dance for pedestrians.
"We're taking Nike's lead with a proactive title," Skaggs explains. "We
want people to get off the sofa, get away from the TV, stop shopping."
This "House" will be built in three other Pittsburgh locations,
including The Waterfront Town Square in Homestead on Saturday and Dominion
Plaza, Downtown, on Monday. For the finale on Sept. 14, the dancers will
perform as part of the Alloy's fall fund-raiser, "Topless2," at the First
Avenue Garage, Downtown.
Each site has its own challenges.
"First of all, you are competing with the outside, which is sort of an
organized chaos," says Skaggs.
Local disc jockey Edgar Um Bucholtz will tackle the job of gathering
the audience and organizing the chaos of the street. "He's a real disc
jockey -- someone who jockeys discs in the old-fashioned vinyl-to-vinyl
way," Skaggs explains. "He'll create the climate from which the dance
springs forth." And, with a collection of more than 4,000 records, the
dancers may not exactly know what they're getting into.
The surfaces also will vary -- concrete, grass, paving stones -- and
are not available for extensive rehearsal. So the dancers are practicing
not only in the studio but also in a grassy park and on a local basketball
court.
And the different surfaces also mean footwear is a prime consideration.
The dancers experimented with running shoes, but the "twisty, dervish
spinning" that Skaggs devised nixed that idea. It turned out that Capezio
dance sneakers provided the optimum benefits with arch flexibility,
turning facility and the ability to take an occasional pop onto the tips
of the toes.
Skaggs has done similar formats with so-called "community dance." She's
used decorations and opening acts in her signature work, "Higher Ground,"
where audience members drink, hang out and dance. "It mixes the formal
with the informal," she says. "Of course, Merce Cunningham used to remix
his work in his 'events.' 'House' is a much more spontaneous project with
dance, music, DJ, audience and fresh air."
So Skaggs sees dance not only as a way of life but also as a part of
life outside of theaters.
And now there is a "House" provided.
Thursday, September 05, 2002 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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