Originally published May 30, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified May 30, 2008 at 6:02 PM
"Myth of Us": dance-theater piece lets us become one with the animals
Choreographer Maureen Whiting's dance-theater piece "Myth of Us" makes connections between human and animal worlds.
Special to The Seattle Times
"Myth of Us"
By Maureen Whiting Company, 8 p.m. Friday, Saturday, and June 5-7, Lee Center for the Arts, Seattle University, Seattle; $8-$10, students free (206-296-2244).Dance review |
The creatures are stirring in Maureen Whiting's new dance-theater piece — ever so slowly at first, it's true. But by the end of "Myth of Us" they've taken us deep into the dream jungle where they live. And they suggest that all you have to do to join them there is open the trapdoors in your mind a little. The result: a lively look at the way we "import" animal imagery and instincts into human rituals and behavior.
Just entering the theater, before the performance, ushers you into an otherworldly atmosphere. On a low platform at front-center stage, dancer Cassie Wulff communes with herself, oblivious to spectators taking their seats. Up some stairs leading into the rafters, Ezra Dickinson gazes down vacantly, a bit like a bored but not-yet-hungry raptor. Under green plastic on the staircase landing, a third figure moves ... rising, shifting, pushing out a shape, like an insect trying to break from its cocoon.
Overhead, white plastic bags — clouds? — populate the air. Beneath them, a small, stuffed-toy elephant surveys the stretching "plain" before him.
Then the place starts coming to life.
The lights ease up. Electric thunder rumbles. For the next hour the dancers — first Wulff, then Dickinson, then Marissa Niederhauser emerging from her green plastic swaddling — pull you into their fluid, totemic world. A "cloud" is lowered and "entered." The synthesizer score picks up a tattoo beat. The dancers begin to move more quickly.
Whiting draws on various animal moves — birdlike darts and staredowns, spidery hand-walks, canine dirt-scratching — to lure her performers, sometimes humorously, to the border of what's human. Dickinson, at moments, resembles a fawn from an alien planet. Wulff is more gamine, while Niederhauser, the ringleader, works wonders with a "tusk-skirt" that makes it seem she has an extra limb or two to kick and nudge with.
The trio's costumes, the work of helga hizer and Tilla Kuenzli, consist of ripped and ragged stockings (moulting skins) tricked out with comically lumpy embellishments. They make the fine performers they adorn look like three recently separated species embarked on a rite that might, with any luck, reunite them.
Performed in the round, "Myth of Us" gathers intensity as Wulff, Dickinson and Niederhauser — sometimes only inches away from their front-row audience — thrash, rub, limp, leap and curl their way toward each other.
The mutable space in which they meet is beautifully realized — clouds, elephant and all — by designer Etta Lilienthal.
Michael Upchurch: mupchurch@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
Movie review: 'The Adjustment Bureau': Hats off to a fine fantasy
Movie review: 'Beastly': Fairy-tale misfits who look like models
UPDATE - 08:57 AM
'Glee' could cover more Michael, Janet ... and ABBA
Movie review: 'Rango': Johnny Depp nails his role as the lizard hero in this wild Western
UPDATE - 09:14 AM
Carey 'embarrassed' over Gadhafi-linked concert

general classifieds
Garage & estate salesFurniture & home furnishings
Electronics
just listed
***Stunning Akc POMERANIAN baby girl W/ FUL...
12 U Select Baseball Coach Wanted
1994 WIn 1901
More listings
POST A FREE LISTING
- Agency set to investigate handling of 911 call about Josh Powell
- Proposal to link Market, aquarium may be too ambitious for Seattle
- Chilling 911 tapes reveal pleas for help to go to Josh Powell home
- Lakewood cop accused of embezzling $150K meant for slain officers' families
- UW's Shawn Kemp Jr. makes own way despite familiar name, number | Steve Kelley
- 3 big health insurers stockpile $2.4 billion as rates keep rising
- State Medicaid program to stop paying for unneeded ER visits
- NBA's David Stern open to league returning to Seattle
- Prosecutor: Powell's final act ends doubt he killed wife
- Was idea of court-ordered test too much for Josh Powell?
- State Medicaid program to stop paying for unneeded ER visits
- 3 big health insurers stockpile $2.4 billion as rates keep rising
- Here it is: The secret to stir-fried chicken | Taste
- Local aerospace suppliers say they feel squeezed by Boeing
- Dicks channeled federal money to Puget Sound project his son ran
- 'Gauguin and Polynesia': dazzling mix-and-match | Art review
- Buttoned Up: Nine immutable laws of time management
- Happy Hour: French-accented charm at Gainsbourg
- One man's audacious pursuit of sailing history
- Gay-marriage bill passes House, awaits Gregoire's signature



