Hot topics close

Review: Lucid Dreaming, Person to Person

Review Lucid Dreaming Person to Person
In Ursula Eagly’s “Dream Body Body Building” at the Chocolate Factory, the dancers seem to be transmitting a dream state to the audience.
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

Supported by

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Review: Lucid Dreaming, Person to Person

In Ursula Eagly’s “Dream Body Body Building” at the Chocolate Factory, the dancers seem to be transmitting a dream state to the audience.

  • Share full article
  • +
A dancer in a loose shirt and pants has her arms out; she has an earnest expression on her face. Behind her, partially obscured, is a musician at a computer keyboard. The backdrop is a white brick wall with industrial-type light switches, etc.
The choreographer Ursula Eagly in her piece “Dream Body Body Building.” (Behind her is the sound artist Lala Misosniky.)Credit...Brian Rogers
Siobhan Burke
March 6, 2024, 2:38 p.m. ET

For the first stretch of “Dream Body Body Building” at the Chocolate Factory Theater, five performers in a row of folding chairs sit facing the audience, almost entirely still.

We watch their eyes close and remain closed. For a while — it’s hard to say how long; time is bendy here — they appear to be deep in meditation. Maybe they’ve dropped into a dream.

In this mellow and playful work, which had its premiere on Tuesday, the choreographer Ursula Eagly explores the edges between conscious and unconscious perception — the space of lucid dreaming. She seems to be asking: How might such an internal and personal experience become communal? How might performers transmit a dream state to an audience?

At just 45 minutes, “Dream Body” is efficient and thoughtful in its structure. Every moment matters, even when not much seems to be happening. This concurrence of fullness and spaciousness owes much to the sound artist Lala Misosniky, who generates a soothing soundscape from her corner of the stage. Her laptop and other electronics are part of a sculptural constellation of objects: among them metal coat hangers cascading from the ceiling; a decorative plate wrapped in rope, hanging on a wall like a giant dream catcher; and a single roller skate on the floor. (Laurel Atwell, one of the dancers, designed the set.)

Wires affixed to these items seem to channel their vibrations. When Misosniky touches them, new swells of rumbling or sparkling sound emerge. (At times, the work feels like an experimental-dance cousin of A.S.M.R.)

As their eyes drift open, the performers — Madeline Best, Justin Cabrillos, Takemi Kitamura, Atwell and Eagly — begin to stir, talking to themselves in low voices. Then, as if it were the obvious thing to do next, they pick up their chairs and walk into the audience, stationing themselves among several rows of seats. Each addresses a small group of audience members, sharing a sort of guided meditation or hallucinatory proposal.

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
Similar shots
News Archive
  • Nz herald Covid
    Nz herald Covid
    Covid 19 Delta outbreak: Top six most vaccinated districts all in South Island - NZ Herald
    4 Oct 2021
    1
  • Black Friday
    Black Friday
    NOW TV Black Friday deals - what offers are on now, and what to expect
    11 Nov 2019
    1
  • Pixar movies
    Pixar movies
    All 7 Pixar Movies From the 2000s, Ranked
    27 Aug 2024
    1
  • Spider-Man 2
    Spider-Man 2
    Spider-Man 2 PS5 suits: every costume and comic book Easter egg
    20 Oct 2023
    2
This week's most popular shots