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Brian Brooks Moving Company
Pinata
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The future of dance is a talking pinata. Go ahead and laugh. Brian
Brooks Moving Company, an up-and-coming Brooklyn-based group making its American Dance
Festival debut, humbly makes the argument that humor, along with a kindergartenesque
approach to the world, is not only justified in 2005, but logical. And shortly after Mr.
Pinata, a little papier-mache donkey in a spotlight, opens the show with a comic
voiceover about cellphones and the company website, another pinata is lowered from above,
to be bashed open by little "girl" with a big stick. Guts get spilled.
Thats life.
Pinata, a new 70-minute piece completes Brooks color
saga. First there was a pink dance, Dance-o-Matic (2002), then a green
dance, Acre (2003), and now, in 2005, part three, the finale, this multi-colored
extravaganza with confetti. Brooks has a painterly interest in things. But, hes fun,
too. Songs by Cesaria Evora, the Scissor
Sisters, Senor Coconut, Cyndi Lauper and Maurice Ravel create a soundscape that could
only make sense on an IPOD or in Brooks brain, which has a clear predilection for
pop culture.
This is all filled in with birdsong and synthesizer in a score by Tom
Lopez. The dance itself, handled by a quintet of likeable performers including Brooks,
comes at you like TV, like Sesame Street segments, a series of episodes, really, each a
different dance with a different song, a different color, and a different
"look".
The stage is a coloring book for Brooks, who starts with a glistening
blank whiteness, then falling snow and dancers in football uniform pants, Elizabethan
collars, feathers, lacey briefs and aviator hats, also all in white. More confetti comes
on, and with it the first touch of color, orange, tossed from the hands of dancers, Hard Nut style, during
flex-footed side-leaping crossovers. These "steps," like a lot of Brooks
choreography, are almost, but not quite, pedestrian. The influence from his work with
Elizabeth Streb, a choreographer with a body-slam aesthetic, is evident in the deliberate
gracelessness and extended use of the floor, upon which dancers are scooting, lying down,
jumping like Mexican jumping beans, or taking Pilates exercises to the extreme.
Each dance leaves its trace. Orange confetti gives way to red, green,
blue and yellow. The stage becomes a cartoon-colored carpet with a big, red X. Finally,
striding through all the detritus, the dancers stand in a semi-circle like the finalists
of a beauty pageant, wearing turn-of-the-century ball gowns, in black. Its time for Bolero
in drag. Ravels endless anthem builds and builds and builds, but Brooks has his
dancers wave their hands around in complicated gestures that read as a kind of romantic
sign language. They never take a step.
Dont laugh. The future of dance may have not much to do with
dance at all if Brian Brooks has his way. And thats not necessarily bad news.
July 5, 2005 Michael Wade Simpson