Annie Wang’s “had my mouth” Offers Self-Protection Through Lyrical Movement
Were they bearing their teeth in preparation to kill? Screaming silently in agony? Conjuring lost joy of their youth?
Were they bearing their teeth in preparation to kill? Screaming silently in agony? Conjuring lost joy of their youth?
So, while trying to strictly manage the pervasive NYC version of Arts Presenters-infected “festival fomo,” I still accumulated enough exposure to the spores of a range of performances in the January flurry to wander into a compost pile of considerations on what is doggedly sprouting among us in the age of extinction.
The interdisciplinary work “Aristotle Thinks Again” is a thought-provoking masterpiece written by Chuck Mee, directed and choreographed by Dan Shafer, and co-created and choreographed by the immensely talented members of Great Jones Repertory.