Photo © Carol Goodden, 1970

REPERTORY/ Man Walking Down the Side of a Building

“Just what [the title] says, seven stories.”
Trisha Brown, Trisha Brown: Dance and Art in Dialogue, 1961-2001, Teicher, Hendel

“A natural activity under the stress of an unnatural setting. Gravity reneged. Vast scale. Clear order. You start at the top, walk straight down, stop at the bottom. All those soupy questions that arise in the process of selecting abstract movement according to the modern dance tradition -- what, when, where, and how -- are all solved in collaboration between choreographer and place.  If you eliminate all those eccentric possibilities that the choreographic imagination can conjure and just have a person walk down an aisle, then you see the movement as the activity.  The paradox of one action working against another is very interesting to me, and is illustrated by Man Walking Down the Side of a Building, where you have gravity working one way on the body and my intention to have a naturally walking person working in the other way.” - Trisha Brown, Trisha Brown: Dance and Art in Dialogue, 1961-2001, Teicher, Hendel

CHOREOGRAPHY:

Trisha Brown

SOUND:

Ambient

Visual Design:

Trisha Brown, Nonas, Richard, Jared Bark

COSTUME:

Street clothes

LENGTH:

Brief

Performers:

1

ORIGINAL CAST:

Joseph Schlichter

NY PREMIERE:

In and around 80 Wooster Street, New York, NY, April 18, 1970

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