
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance | destinations
| film | opera
| television | theater | archives
Joe Goode Performance Group
Stay Together, Deeply There
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Joe Goode deserves to
live. His Performance Group is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, and if the
average lifetime of a modern dance company is eleven months, you can bet that any group
that stays together as long as Goodes has got to be, well, good. Joe Goode is still
fresh. He is a choreographer who has never been particularly interested in pure movement;
a theatre wiz who has fused musical comedy with performance art; and an experimental
artist more inclined to make you laugh than push your buttons. Hes like a gay James
Taylora folksy, urban outsider, a handsome guy with a sad smile. From "29
Effeminate Gestures," the seminal early solo that catapulted Goode into the national
spotlight, to this years "Stay Together," a collaboration with Michael
Tilson Thomas, Goode has blasted-out a singular artistic pathway for himself, straddling
genres or making up new ones.
The premiere in hometown San Francisco of "Stay Together"
offered Goodes first collaboration with Thomas, who may be one of the leading stars
of the classical music field, but in the role(s) of artistic director and conductor, not
composer. In fact, Thomas musical score for the piece is one of the best things
about it. The computer-generated music is more shrill and stark than typical for a Goode
dance--there is a lot of quick, percussive music and a complete absence of folkiness. It
is as if Thomas music has forced Goode to grow some new edges, to encounter music as
a force rather than just an accompaniment.
While there is palpable tension between the visual and musical
elements, things seemed a lot looser in the narrative department. Goode plays a successful
gay artist who is inspired to tears by the red blotch paintings of Robert Motherwell.
Longtime company member Elizabeth Burrit gets to play yet another screeching, ironical
role as the agent/go-between/best friend. Her ability to delight us with humorous
one-liners continues, but the fact is that, along with the video close-ups, Goode is
repeating himself here, running dangerously close to the risk of becoming a Goode cliche.
There is a young boy-friend, bit parts for the chorus members, and a quick-moving series
of dances with all the surprises and athletic maneuvers one would expect from Goode. At
the end, the dancer Felipe Barrueto Cabello, who has not played a major role so far, is
suddenly seizing the microphone, filling up the screen with an angry face, lamenting the
ridiculousness of all this Woody-Allan-style neurosis, when the world, the greater world,
is so filled-to-the-brim with real problems. This piece, Goode seems to be saying, is just
a product of a couple of successful, middle-aged white, gay, male artists. Who cares?
"Deeply There" is a revival of a much-lauded 1999 piece about
a group of friends and neighbors who create a de facto family during the final decline of
a man dying of AIDS. Here, every character, including the family dog, gets to talk and
sing, and the dynamics, which include a sister (Burritt) who feuds with the surviving
partner (Goode) before coming to some kind of terms by the end, are episodic rather than
multi-dimensional. Seen in 2006, the piece seems almost nostalgic, a reminder of the
alliances and deep connections made by survivors throughout the ordeal that affected San
Francisco perhaps more than any other place.
Goode, in his own way, turns the horror into opportunity. With humor,
humility, athletic dancing and all the elements of medium-budget contemporary
dance-theatre (video, sets, full-time dancers who can sing and act, good lighting and
costumes, original music) he creates a heart-warming occasion rather than something
darker. From what weve seen of the last thirty seconds of his latest work, however,
there may be some heavier stuff coming our way in the near future.
June 9, 2006 Michael Wade Simpson