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Close encounters
The always in-search-of Erika Chong Shuch
sends her talents into Orbit
Robert Avila | SF Bay Guardian |
July 2006
Love is more than metaphor in Orbit
(notes from the edge of forever). Love is like the intractable
need connected to
the exploration
of space — especially when the search is bent toward the
hope of some ultimate encounter: that contact with somebody,
out there, who knows who you are. It's as if an inner wilderness
were turned inside out and projected to infinity.
And so Orbit starts with the mutual
seduction of two lovers onstage, and with flickering TV screens
(the sets dangling
from long vertical
skewers loaded with books and the occasional table lamp)
tapping classic sci-fi movies like Close Encounters of the
Third Kind,
Invasion of the Body Snatchers, and Alien, with their mix
of rapture and terror. Here promise and betrayal collide
with
gravitational conviction, at the point where the yearning
for communion meets
the blind panic of a self dissolving; a body waylaid, violated,
no longer your own (if it ever was). "That transmission?
Mother's deciphered it," says Sigourney Weaver. "It
doesn't look like an SOS.... It looks like a warning."
But Orbit itself is never warned
off. Rather, as the title implies, it's continually reapproaching.
A new dance theater
work from
the Erika Shuch Performance Project — the brainchild of
San Francisco-based choreographer, director, and performer
Erika Chong Shuch, and the resident company at Intersection for
the Arts — Orbit spirals around our obsession with UFOs,
extraterrestrial life, alien abduction, and other moon-age daydreams.
The piece pulls a variety of texts, media, and simulacra into
its elliptical trajectory (including recorded interviews, pop
music, original songs, and some wonderfully transporting interactive
video segments designed by Ishan Vernalis and lll), and is a
playfully eclectic, moody, and deeply romantic whirl, danced
and acted by Shuch and cocreators Melanie Elms and Danny Wolohan.
Joining them is an ensemble, dressed in street clothes and postal
uniforms, composed of Kieran Chavez, Joseph Estlack, Daveen DiGiacomo
(also responsible for the live music and sound design), Courtney
Moreno, and Erin Mei-Ling Stuart.
Elms comes on as the extradimensional
counterpart to Shuch's and Wolohan's young lovers — whom we've seen alternately
drifting over the sensual ridges of the lunar surface projected
behind them (luxuriating in the exploration of personal space),
helping one another (with a touch of comic strain) to moonwalk
off the walls, or defending favorite metaphors for their place
in the cosmos and their search for ETs. Behind them Elms's retro
space alien glides around as if invisibly in mischievous blue
gloves, the show's intergalactic pixie, puppet mistress of hapless
earthlings.
At times, moving about the stage
in an idiosyncratic way coolly reminiscent of some ray gun-toting go-go dancer, Elms seems
no more than a figment of the collective imagination. (In one
eerily comic scene, the strange hands rooting around in a panicky
Wolohan's sweatshirt turn out not to be blue-gloved, but the
hands of his lover.) From other angles, however, she becomes
an active force of violently erratic potential, like a galactic
succubus. The chorus, meanwhile, in alternately trancelike and
frenetic motion, do everything from dance, sing, and play instruments
to operate the ropes and pulleys that rearrange those TV-and-book
kebabs around the stage. With Elms they circle the lovers as
forces of nature both internal and external, mercurial ones too,
capable of imparting a gentle caress one minute, a savage abuse
the next.
One or two segments veering toward
the madcap — like Wolohan's
admittedly hilarious puppet-show narration of his rescue by a
friendly lighthouse (Shuch) — can be funny at the cost
of some subtlety, and in truth the parts don't contribute
equally to the whole. But the surprises in store are several,
and there's
a cumulative force to the loose but inspired patterning of
movement, theme, and image. If part of that pattern is the
idea of lives
in eternal orbit around some elusive whole, always approaching
and never landing, Shuch and company manage a not insignificant
union all the same, joining the passion of the true believer
with the wry alert eye of the perennial searcher.
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