Faye Driscoll Group @ FUSEBOX

THERE IS SO MUCH MAD IN ME

There is so much mad in me

April 22-April 24 presented by testperformancetest
Austin Ventures Studio at Ballet Austin (AUSTIN TEXAS Y’ALL!!!)

“Faye Driscoll is the future” – Elizabeth Zimmer, Metro

Driven by extreme emotional states and voyeuristic urges Faye Driscoll’s There is so much mad in me explores shifting states of mob-consciousness as choreography. Nine powerhouse performers slide from one extreme to the next revealing parallel universes lodged within familiar states of mind.

There is so much mad in me, asks how we feel and connect in this time of over stimulation and look at me distraction. Investigating ritual from torture to religious rapture, There is so much mad in me lives within the similarities between polar extremes. What are the fine lines between the abject and the sublime, voyeurism and empathy, entertainment and reality?

Faye Driscoll devises multi-dimensional dance dramas that engender complex experience by blurring the lines between fantasy and reality, arousal and disgust, fun and violence, spectacle and authenticity. She strives to create new forms of theatrical experience aimed to provoke feeling, stimulate the senses and activate the mind. The result is often under-the-skin, hysterical, awkward and devastating.

“Driscoll…has a reputation for serious provocation. She makes spectators squirm, and there’s an uneasy edge to the laughter she elicits in exploring our dark pent up, raging urges.”  Deborah Jowitt, Village Voice

“In a desperate attempt to keep the overstimulation going, performers switch gears from violence to sex to vanity to voyeurism. Everything is an aggressive action, and when momentum lulls, chinks of panic show through what might otherwise be mere boredom. Dancers look at each other as if suddenly naked. Their addiction to zest, made deliberately transparent in the moments-between, reminds us that our cultural obsession with invasive TV and Twitter outbursts is akin to the snake eating its own tail, the cycle feeding itself.” Mary Love Hodges, Dance Magazine

“Driscoll understands that at the heart of live theater are emotional distances (perspective, we might call it if this were a painting). She beams a light on theatrical self-fashioning, and lets you feel the scraps of being fluttering in the dark.” Apollinare Scherr, Arts Journal

Faye Driscoll Group @ WEXNER & DTW

Faderskull

This fall Faye Driscoll (AKA Faderskull) brings me back through NYC for the remount of our past two creations.

837 Photoshoot

837 Photoshoot Flashback

837 Venice Boulevard at the Wexner Center for the Arts, November 18th to 20th [Heather Olson joins the cast, and after two weeks rehearsing on Governors Island via LMCC, we pack up all our Bessie Awards and hit the road for Columbus, Ohio!]

There is so much mad in me at Dance Theater Workshop, September 22nd to 25th [Back by popular demand after our fiercely sold out March 2010 premiere! View our good old video teaser on Vimeo or check out the NY Times review from April 2010.  Don't miss!]

Mad: Michael and Jesse Wrestle

There really is so much mad in me.

MORE Faye Driscoll!!!

Faye Driscoll Group: MAD IN ME @ DTW

There is so much mad in me @ Dance Theater Workshop
March 31st – April 3rd, 7:30pm

IMAGE

There is so much mad in me - VIDEO TEASER on Vimeo
OR just buy tickets immediately

There is so much mad in me investigates the physical and theatrical narratives that drive our misplaced need to be seen. Driscoll, with her company of dancers, ask who we are and how we connect in this time of over stimulation and look at me distraction. Working from images seen in the media of people in extreme states, from torture to religious rapture, There is so much mad in me examines the similarities between polar extremes. What are the fine lines between the abject and the sublime, voyeurism and empathy, entertainment and reality? From creating facades to seeking the divine to committing violent acts and falling in love, There is so much mad in me explores shifting states of consciousness as choreography while investigating how we process information.

Performance: Lindsay Clark, Lily Gold, Michael Helland, Tony Orrico, Jennie MaryTai Liu, Jacob Slominski, Adaku Utah, Jesse Zaritt and Nikki Zialcita

Design: Machine Dazzle, Amanda K. Ringger, Sara C. Walsh and Brandon Wolcott

Above Image: Christy Pessagno