Righting a wrong: dance that takes social issues to heart.DAVID David, in the Bible David, d. c.970 B.C., king of ancient Israel (c.1010–970 B.C.), successor of Saul. The Book of First Samuel introduces him as the youngest of eight sons who is anointed king by Samuel to replace Saul, who had been deemed a failure. POPALISKY'S Barred from Life is a stark multimedia look at men who were incarcerated incarcerated /in·car·cer·at·ed/ (in-kahr´ser-at?ed) imprisoned; constricted; subjected to incarceration. in·car·cer·at·ed adj. Confined or trapped, as a hernia. for crimes they did not commit. The work ends on a heart-stopping note: A man and woman step forward and read names of those wrongly convicted for murder, parricide PARRICIDE, civil law. One who murders his father; it is applied, by extension, to one who murders his mother, his brother, his sister, or his children. The crime committed by such person is also called parricide. Merl. Rep. mot Parricide; Dig. 48, 9, 1, 1. 3, 1. 4. , rape, child molestation, with the length of imprisonment Imprisonment See also Isolation. Alcatraz Island former federal maximum security penitentiary, near San Francisco; “escapeproof.” [Am. Hist.: Flexner, 218] Altmark, the German prison ship in World War II. [Br. Hist. . It's a long list. Then from the audience come other voices. You recognize some of them from the video that forms the backbone of Barred. They belong to exonerees. Dances based on social issues are not new. From Anna Sokolow and Lester Horton to Jawole Willa Jo Zollar and Joe Goode, choreographers have addressed issues of justice and social responsibility. But these choreographers shaped their perspectives into metaphors and abstractions. Popalisky cuts to the bone. He deals with real men of flesh and blood. Encountering them in person after having seen them on screen hits like a thunder bolt. "When I saw these men get up, I felt a lump in my throat so big that for a moment I couldn't talk," one spectator commented during the after-performance discussion at The Attic, a tiny loft theater in downtown Santa Cruz where Barred was performed last April. Barred came about almost serendipitously. Popalisky, director of dance at Santa Clara University, was talking with a colleague from the law school in a parking lot. What Cookie Ridolfi, who also directs the Northern California Innocence Project (NCIP NCIP National Center to Improve Practice NCIP NISO Circulation Interchange Protocol NCIP Novell Certified Internet Professional NCIP National Commission for Indigenous Peoples (Philippines) NCIP North Carolina-Israel Partnership ), told him resonated deeply. "Like these guys," he says, "I am middle-aged. But I have had the opportunity to build a life, have a career, have a family. They have nothing, and yet this could happen to any of us." With the help of NCIP and the Center on Wrongful Conviction at Northwestern University, and financial and in-kind support from SCU SCU Santa Clara University SCU Southern Cross University (New South Wales, Australia) SCU Southern California University of Health Sciences (Whittier, California) SCU Serious Crimes Unit SCU Special Care Unit , Popalisky set to work on what he calls a docu-dance drama. He enlisted students, colleagues, and friends to stage police interrogations, "crimes" in-progress scenes, and dream sequences that, together with the exoneree interviews, form the video. Popalisky, who performs against these visuals, sees his dancing as "the visceral glue" that holds the nightmarish scenario together. As Everyman, he recoils in fear, collapses in despair, lashes out in blind fury, and thrusts his body into an endless loop of pacing--push-ups--sitting--pacing. Barred received its world premiere at SCU on March 31, 2004. Presented at a meeting of the American Association of Law Schools-Clinical Legal Education conference later that year, the work received a CLEA CLEA Collection of Laws for Electronic Access CLEA Contaminated Land Exposure Assessment (UK) CLEA Commonwealth Legal Education Association (UK) Creativity Award. With its foldable set and a black box that is table, bed, bench, cell, and coffin, +the work has since traveled to other university and community theaters in the West and Midwest. For campus performances, Popalisky invites students to read the names. Post-performance discussions are emotional because although these exonerees are free, their ordeal is not over. Some have lost families, some have difficulty finding jobs, all of them have lost faith in the criminal justice system. When Popalisky initially contacted the former prisoners, he offered to pay a small amount for their time, but quickly gained their trust and found them open and forthcoming. "For some, it was an opportunity to finally talk about what had happened to them," he says. Among the exonerees present in Santa Cruz was John Stoll, accused of child molestation and freed after 20 years because of a lawyer's tip to NCIP. "They were able to find six of the boys who had claimed molestation molestation n. the crime of sexual acts with children up to the age of 18, including touching of private parts, exposure of genitalia, taking of pornographic pictures, rape, inducement of sexual acts with the molester or with other children, and variations of these . Five of them recanted and all said they were so relieved to finally come clear on this," Popalisky explains. David Pope was wrongfully convicted of rape and freed after 15 years when the DA's office reopened the case after receiving an anonymous tip. "More sophisticated DNA tests proved that David couldn't have done it," Popalisky says, "and they also matched those of somebody already in prison for rape." Last September, Popalisky performed Barred at the University of San Francisco • • [ , which offers the country's only major in Performing Arts and Social Justice. "These artists want to be involved in the process of shaping our culture," says Kathi Gallagher, professor of visual and performing arts. During their junior and senior year, dance and theater artists collaborate on full-evening productions. This past May, for instance, nine seniors premiered Co[r]rection, a theater, dance, and puppetry puppetry Art of creating and manipulating puppets in a theatrical show. Puppets are figures that are moved by human rather than mechanical aid. They may be controlled by one or several puppeteers, who are screened from the spectators. show that focused on the effects of neglect and indifference on a child's development. Gallagher says her students were moved by the way Popalisky "channelled raw emotion through dance." Popalisky next performs Barred on October 27, in Mountain View, California For the census-designated place, see Mountain View, Contra Costa County, California. For other places called "Mountain View", see . Mountain View is a city in Santa Clara County, in the U.S. state of California. The city gets its name from the views of the Santa Cruz Mountains. . http://itrs.scu.edu/bfl. Rita Felciano is dance critic for the San Francisco Bay Guardian The San Francisco Bay Guardian (also known as the SF Bay Guardian, Bay Guardian, and the Guardian) is a free alternative newspaper published weekly in San Francisco, California. The paper is owned mostly by its publisher, Bruce B. . |
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