`DELI' FESTIVAL OFFERS MOVEABLE FEAST.Imagine this: It's a hot summer day in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. , and a crowd of perplexed people has gathered around a Times Square store-front. This used to be a Herman's Sporting Goods Noun 1. sporting goods - sports equipment sold as a commodity commodity, trade good, good - articles of commerce sports equipment - equipment needed to participate in a particular sport store, but now there is a modern dancer in the empty window, improvising, and everyone keeps asking, "What is she doing?" This was the scene twice daily for two weeks in August, when the second annual "Deli Dances in Times Square" festival brought forty downtown choreographers This is a list of choreographers A
"Deli Dances" owes its existence to Anita Durst durst v. Archaic A past tense and a past participle of dare. , a 32-year-old actress whose father, real estate magnate Douglas Durst, owns both this year's building and the former deli. Both locations will soon give way to a high-rise office building, but in the interim Durst has been allowed to use one or the other as a performance space. Though Durst focuses mostly on theater, last year she invited a friend, choreographer cho·re·o·graph v. cho·re·o·graphed, cho·re·o·graph·ing, cho·re·o·graphs v.tr. 1. To create the choreography of: choreograph a ballet. 2. Despina Stamos, to show dances in the deli, which Durst had gutted, painted black, and equipped with basic lights. Stamos extended the invitation to other choreographers, including Tony Silva, who came on board as a producer. With less than a month's notice, they brought together the first "Deli Dances". Its mission was to introduce modern dance to people who had little or no exposure to it, with the hope of inspiring new interest in downtown art. "I'm trying to promote a community, and to give people something different," Durst says. "I love the reaction of the audience. They're really shocked by it." Last year's festival even generated a following. "After the whole thing was over, people kept coming to the deli," Stamos says. "We found that very heartening heart·en tr.v. heart·ened, heart·en·ing, heart·ens To give strength, courage, or hope to; encourage. See Synonyms at encourage. Adj. 1. ." This year's festival was "a dramatic step up," Silva says, with a better equipped theater and twice as many choreographers, including JoAnna Mendl Shaw, Le Minh Tam, Paul Langland, Ariane Anthony, Yanira Castro, Emma Hogarth, Christine Bodwitch and Rachel Cohen cohen or kohen (Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male. . Like last year, admission was free to the hour-long performances, which took place at 12:30 and 8 and featured four or five choreographers each. Audience members were allowed to enter and leave at will. The strategy was to draw them in with the window performances and cheerful pitches like "Free modern dance!" and "Break out of your shell! See something new!" (and, as a last resort, "It's air-conditioned!"). Audiences included construction workers, families with small children and tourists from across the country and overseas. "Even street people," adds assistant producer Julie Atlas Muz. "There are no restrictions. Everyone deserves to see modern dance." For the many tourists, Silva says, "Deli Dances" offered another slice of New York City, "on a very grassroots level, which I don't think is represented much in Times Square anymore--it's pretty much glitz glitz Informal n. Ostentatious showiness; flashiness: "a garish barrage of show-biz glitz" Peter G. Davis. tr.v. and glitter." The festival also involved a teaser teaser an animal used to sexually tease but not to impregnate the members of the opposite sex. Usually males and they may be surgically prepared to ensure that they cannot mate or are not fertile. in the Times Square subway station, two "open stage" nights (as in "open mike") and a marathon performance involving twentyseven choreographers on the last day. The festival has only another year before the high-rise goes up, but its organizers are optimistic. As Muz says, the festival can float: "As long as we have a location where we can get people in, and four walls, we're cool." |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion