I usually throw a few notes down on my computer before going to bed if I think that I might want to write about something that I’ve been to. The first note that I left for myself after getting home from seeing Corian Ellisor and Alex Abarca’s My People at 7 Stages was the question “Why am I drunk?” I got a cup of wine from Java Jive before the show and found that my face and lips had gone completely numb and I was finding new comfortable ways to lean against the banister by the stage. For a moment I wondered if I’d actually been drugged but I suspect that my body was just worn out by a long week and there was more wine in that cup than normal. Fortunately I had walked there and didn’t really have to worry about driving.
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Tag Archives: Corian Ellisor
The Modern Atlanta Dance Festival
According to the “About” section of the MAD Festival’s Facebook page, “The annual Modern Atlanta Dance Festival (MAD) presents the best of Atlanta’s modern/contemporary dance.” This year’s lineup, however, was bookended by a couple of choreographers from outside of the Metro area, Melissa Pihos and Sarah Wildes Arnette, both of whom are assistant professors of dance at Valdosta State University. If, perhaps, this goes against the mission statement of the festival, I think that there is enough value to creating the opportunity for Atlanta audiences to see artists from elsewhere in Georgia to justify the geographic expansion. I don’t think that it betrays the sense of the festival’s localness to look outside of the economic domain of the State’s largest metropolitan area, so long as it doesn’t stray too much beyond the boundaries of the State. That said, I’d love to see a separate Southeastern regional dance festival in Atlanta, though I wonder if there’s really a big enough audience for it or, for that matter, a good funding source.
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Corian Ellisor: BAES
Corian Ellisor gets a lot of easy laughs from his audience in BAES (Beauty and Entertainment System), his latest mixed-modal performance piece that I saw this evening at 7 Stages. I spent most of the hour smiling and laughing as his satirical look at the role and impact of beauty took us backstage at a beauty pageant.
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