Seven Deadly Sins: Gluttony

Gallery

2001/2007 |

Seven Deadly Sins: Gluttony

Choreographed by Lawrence Goldhuber
Performed by Arthur Aviles, Jamie Bishton, Keely Garfield, Lawrence Goldhuber, Robert La Fosse, David Parker, Wallie Wolfgruber, Rebecca Wisocky, Molly Hickock

Music by Mark Mothersbaugh, Yello
Costumes by Liz Prince
Lighting Design by Robert Wierzel
Gluttony was commissioned by the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival.

 

QUOTES, REVIEWS AND ARTICLES ABOUT THE ORIGINAL GLUTTONY/SEVEN DEADY SINS AT JACOB’S PILLOW DANCE FESTIVAL


“The two fantasy sins, Lawrence Goldhuber’s Gluttony and Annie-B Parson’s Greed, seemed the most imaginative. Goldhuber, padded to twice his usual volume, trots on with a picnic basket and wolfs down some of the contents, then stretches out for a nap. The lunch comes to life (Bishton, Hickok and Rebecca Wisocky as Hershey’s Kisses, twirling blue ribbons, were my favorites) and eventually eats Goldhuber.”
Marcia B. Siegal, The Boston Phoenix


“Former Bill T. Jones favorite Lawrence Goldhuber created a hilarious “Gluttony.” Padding his massive frame with so much stuffing he looked inflated, Goldhuber was a gleeful picnicker whose post-meal dreams were invaded by oversize versions of the foods he had just eaten. Robert La Fosse was a riot as a dancing hot dog, the lower half of which fell out of the bun to dangle between his legs like an enormous sexual appendage.”
Karen Campbell, The Boston Globe


“Lawrence Goldhuber, against the advice of his friends, chose gluttony (the choreographer and dancer weighs more than 300 pounds). “Gluttony,” he says matter-of-factly, “is the sin I can access most easily.” Goldhuber’s Gluttony features three sections. In the first, he dances with a picnic basket. “I fall asleep, and there’s a dream sequence in which all the things that I ate come back to haunt me.” Liz Prince designed costumes resembling Hershey’s Kisses, chicken legs and a hot dog. “The hot dog has a kind of phallic, sexy-sinister quality,” Goldhuber says. “It’s more like a betrayed lover. My piece ends with death—the hot dog pulls my heart out. It’s so goofy, but it’s fast and funny.”

Gia Kourlas, Time Out New York


DANCE MAGAZINE REVIEW

Dancemakers Put New Spin On `Sins

Nov, 2001, by Wendy Perron

The new conglomerate version of George Balanchine’s The Seven Deadly Sins, masterminded by New York City Ballet principal Robert La Fosse and Broadway choreographer Chet Walker, gathered seven diverse choreographers (one sin for each)–Lawrence Goldhuber, Jamie Bishton, Chet Walker, David Dorfman, Robert La Fosse, Richard Move, and Annie-B Parson–and twelve versatile dancers. The result was an ingenious celebration of bad behavior that was rarely sinister.

For this reviewer, the highlight was “Greed.” Choreographed by Annie-B Parson (co-director of Big Dance Theatre) and featuring Molly Hickok (also of Big Dance) as chief sinner, it was hilarious and insightful. Parson set her ten-minute allotment vaguely in Germany–she used an old recording of a Kurt Weill orchestration–and attached greed to privilege. Surrounded by four women who were perhaps handmaidens, perhaps other society ladies, Hickok went giddy over a pair of red shoes, yelling “Meine Schuhe!” (German for “my shoes”) and staggering after Kate Johnson, who was wearing them. We ached with laughter over the progression of her greed, recognizing how greed begets greed, how once you step onto that escalator of materialism, it’s hard to step off. By the time Hickok spotted a white parasol that she had to have, she was a raving lunatic–and we all knew the feeling. At the end, her subordinate, Rebecca Wisocky, was left admiring the parasol, purring with a budding greed of her own. One of the horrors–and allures–of sin is its contagiousness.

“Sloth” gave downtown choreographer David Dorfman a chance to slow down. He luxuriated in loose-limbed movement and sly verbal wit. Paul Matteson rolled over another dancer, triggering a conversation about how to do nothing well. Matteson danced with such buoyancy and release that you could feel your lungs expand while watching him. A wonderful moment came when Matteson and Jamie Bishton faced the audience blankly, held a stillness, and then talked about how great it was.

The color red figured prominently in Walker’s “Anger.” The dancers posed indignantly and strutted with an attractive pent-up wrath to Astor Piazzolla’s tangy tangos. When Desmond Richardson flared a red cloth like a toreador, he looked gloriously sexy, but neither he nor any of the other dancers ever burst into real rage. Walker’s “Anger” remained a somewhat decorative sin.

Lawrence Goldhuber, the large dancer who cut an unforgettable figure with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, brought a mischievous innocence to “Gluttony.” Padded to look even heftier than he is, he carried a picnic basket, stuffed a hot dog down his throat, gurgled a soda and, completely sated, rolled over for a nap. He dreamed of the basket rising to heaven. He dreamed of a hot dog, drumsticks, and chocolate kisses becoming human size, with La Fosse as a rather lewd hot dog (costumes by Liz Prince). All the foodstuffs fought over him, wrecking his gluttony heaven.

“Envy,” fashioned by Bishton, the novice choreographer of the group, was a competition between Richardson and the young Rasta Thomas, who tossed off a series of amazing pirouettes. But the choreography was unremarkable.

Richard Move, of Martha@Mother fame, created “Lust” as a solo for NYCB principal Helene Alexopoulos. She curved sinuously around herself with a kind of deadly restraint. The tension mounted until she opened her mouth wide and reached her arms out, her hands fluttering crazily. A stunning solo, “Lust” offered a glimpse of psychic danger but remained highly controlled. (The music collage had a heavy beat and snatches of the voice of Anita Hill testifying. Hmmm.)

“Pride” was a parade of extravagant characters staged by La Fosse. Parting glittering drapes one at a time, a soldier, a showgirl, a macho construction worker, a cheerleader, and other archetypes of popular media entered, dressed (by Karl Lucifeld) to the hilt in hues of gold. Amid this high-spirited party of scantily clothed figures (representing vanity rather than pride to this eye), the reentrance of Goldhuber, regal in guru-type robes, brought pride down to earth with a bump. Never have I felt so relieved to see a 300-pound man on a crowded dance stage.

When Balanchine choreographed Sins in 1933 and revived it in 1958, a single ballerina committed all seven sins (Tilly Losch in ’33 and Allegra Kent in ’58, with Lotte Lenya singing Weill’s original tunes on stage both times), which must have given the ballet a certain consistency. In the new version, one didn’t miss the consistency of style–it was part of the fascination. And the dancing and performing were excellent throughout. But one might miss the consistency of choreographic interest. Basically this was an inspired idea whose execution was inconsistent. But then, inconsistency is no sin.

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Collaborators

Keely Garfield
Dancer, Choreographer
Keely, originally from London, England, has lived in New York City since 1986. She has received numerous commissions for her work, and has been presented at many theaters and festivals both nationally and internationally. Among other endeavors, Garfield has created work for ballet dancers (Dance Theatre of Harlem), antique puppets (Golem, Chechoslovak-American Marionette Theatre), musical theater (Gypsy, Sundance Theatre, Utah, Carnival, New Jersey Shakespeare Festival), children (Reel to Real, Lincoln Center), students (Barnard, Hunter), and MTV. Garfield is a curator (with Peggy Peloquin) of Dance Theater Workshop's Family Matters series, and serves as the chair of DTW's Artist Committee. Highlights include: Deep (The Joyce Theater), Disturbing The Peace (Zenon Dance Company, MN), Iron Lung (Groundworks Dancetheater, OH), and Disturbulance (Dance Theater Workshop), Scent of Mental Love (Film for Radio Bremen/Canal Arte), and most recently Line & Sink Her (Danspace Project). Keely is very happy to be working again with Larry, her dearest pal! For more information visit www.keelygarfield.org
Wallie Wolfgruber
Dancer
Wallie was born in a Bavaria and passed her stage exam in dance with distinction at the Vienna State Theater at age fifteen. Having explored the ballet idiom at the Landestheater Salzburg and the National Theater in Munich, she became captivated by modern dance, moved to NYC and became a principal member of the Lar Lubovitch Dance Company in 1988. Other companies she danced with include the Rod Rogers Dance Company, Keith Young Dance, Donald Byrd/The Group, the Ohad Naharin Dance Company and Sung Soo Ahn. She has performed in Europe, Asia, Central-and South America, Canada and in over 30 states in the US, and started choreographing in 1996. Her choreography has been presented in Germany, Canada, France and in NYC at the Tribeca Performing Arts Center, LaMama E.T.C., Joyce Soho, Joe's Pub, the Duke Theater on 42nd Street and DTW. Her video dance A Hands- On Affair (created with Alvin Booth) was screened at the Dance on Camera West International Festival in Los Angeles and at the Lincoln Center Dance on Camera Festival. Certified in the Trager Approach/ Psychophysical Integration, she holds an MFA in Dance from NYU Tisch School of the Arts and has extensive domestic and international teaching experience including: Co-founder and director of SEAD (Salzburg Experimental Academy of Dance) in Austria, choreographic assistant for Lar Lubovitch and director of the undergraduate dance program and tenured Associate Professor at SUNY Brockport. Recent activities include two commissions from Florida State University, joining their dance faculty for Spring 07, presenting an evening of works at the University of Rochester and at LaMama E.T.C.
David Parker
Dancer
David is the artistic director of David Parker and The Bang Group, a rhythm-based theatrical dance troupe which was just presented in its sixth full-evening program by DTW last week. The Bang Group has toured widely throughout North America and Europe and is known for such signature works as Slapstuck, a duet for Velcro-clad men and Nut/Cracked, Parker's comic/subversive neo-vaudeville Nutcracker which has enjoyed two highly acclaimed runs at DTW. Nut/Cracked has been performed over 100 times in venues ranging from large performing arts centers to cabaret stages both here and abroad. It will appear in Boston next season as part of the Out on the Edge Festival. In addition to touring and creating with his own company, Parker has recently made new dances for The Julliard School, The Anna Sokolow Theater Dance Ensemble, and, the University of Illinois in Champaign/Urbana. This year he will also make new dances commissioned by Pittsburgh Dance Alloy and Groundworks Dance in Cleveland. As a performer, he has been joyfully appearing with Doug Elkins in his reconception of The Sound of Music called Fraulein Maria at Joe's Pub, and Fiona Marcotty Dolenga's Hidden Arena Dance. He serves on the board of directors for Danspace Project and The Field and also sits on the Bessie Awards Committee. He was a founding member of Pink Ribbons Project/Dancers in Motion Against Breast Cancer. Parker teaches dance composition at Barnard College and The Alvin Ailey School. For more information visit www.thebanggroup.com
Jamie Bishton
Dancer
Jamie performed as a dancer with Twyla Tharp from 1985 through 1999, with American Ballet Theater (1988-1990) and was an original member of Mikhail Baryshnikov's White Oak Dance Project where he worked until 1998. In 1998 he became Ms. Tharp's director of the dancers for her company, THARP! and toured with them as her assistant and as a dancer. Mr. Bishton received a New York Dance and Performance "BESSIE" award for Outstanding Creative Achievement in 1995. In November of 2000, Mr. Bishton was awarded a Distinguished Alumnus Award from California Institute of the Arts. He was a producer with Dancers Responding to AIDS and is now a Vice President with NOARUS Auto Group in Los Angeles, California. Mr. Bishton worked on Patrick Swayze's dance movie One Last Dance in which he was Mr. Swayze's dance double and also cast as a dancer. His other film dance credits include The Next Step, James L. Brooks' I'll Do Anything, Reefer Madness: The Musical, and with Miss Tharp, on PBS' Dance in America - In the Upper Room. His choreographic work and company Jamie Bishton | DANCE has been presented at various festivals, showcases, and theaters in New York City and the United States. Mr. Bishton was one of the 7 co-creators on The Seven Deadly Sins at Jacob's Pillow with Mr. Goldhuber and he is thrilled to be performing again as a kiss. It is his favorite role to date.
Robert La Fosse
Performer
Robert La Fosse was born in Beaumont, Texas, received his ballet training at the Marsha Woody Academy of Dance and joined American Ballet Theatre in 1977, where he danced as a principal dancer for nine years. In 1986 he joined New York City Ballet as a principal, dancing lead roles in many full-length classical ballets, including the U.S. premiere of Sir Kenneth MacMillan's Romeo and Juliet. He has danced a wide variety of original roles in ballets by numerous choreographers, including Twyla Tharp, Lynne Taylor Corbett, Jerome Robbins, and Peter Martins. Mr. La Fosse has also starred in the Broadway productions of Bob Fosse's Dancin' and in Jerome Robbins' Broadway, for which he received a Tony Award nomination for Best Actor. In addition to performing, Mr. La Fosse is also a choreographer. Highlights include his first ballet, Rappacini's Daughter created for 'Mikhail Baryshnikov and Company, and over 10 works for the New York City Ballet. He collaborated with John Kelly and Company in Light Shall Lift Them for Brooklyn Academy of Music's Next Wave Festival, and choreographed Stars and Stripes Forever for Les Ballets Trocadero de Monte Carlo. Numerous television appearances include: 'American Ballet Theatre in San Francisco', Twyla Tharp's Push Comes to Shove, and the 'Live From Lincoln Center' telecast of 'Ray Charles in concert with the New York City Ballet'. Mr. La Fosse appeared as Dr. Stahlbaum in the film version of George Balanchine's The Nutcracker. In 1987 he wrote his autobiography entitled Nothing to Hide.
Robert Wierzel
Lighting Design
Robert is pleased to continue his collaboration with Mr. Goldhuber. Robert has worked in theatre, dance, new music and opera, with artists and directors from diverse disciplines and backgrounds, on stages throughout the country and abroad. Mr. Wierzel has a long history (22 years) with choreographer Bill T. Jones and his company, the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company (several Bessie Awards, along with productions at the Lyon Opera Ballet and Berlin Opera Ballet). Other dance collaborations include choreographers Goldhuber & Latsky (Worst Case Scenario-Bessie Award), Margo Sappington, Alonzo King, Sean Curran, Molissa Fenely, Susan Marshall, Charlie Moulton, Arthur Aviles, Trisha Brown, (How long), and Doug Varone, (Orpheus and Euridice - Obie Award-Special Citation). Other credits- Broadway: David Copperfield's Dreams and Nightmares, The Deep Blue Sea. Regional: A.C.T. San Francisco; Arena Stage; Shakespeare Theatre DC; Hartford Stage; Long Wharf Theatre; Goodman Theatre; The Guthrie; Mark Taper Forum; Chicago Shakespeare; Westport Country Playhouse, among many others. Opera companies of Paris (Garnier); Berlin; Tokyo; Toronto; Montreal; Boston; Glimmerglass Opera; New York City Opera; San Diego; San Francisco; Houston; Washington; Seattle; Virginia; Portland; Vancouver; and Chicago, among others. Recent New York project: Fela! A new musical, directed and choreographed by Bill T. Jones.
Liz Prince
Costume Design
Liz Prince designs costumes for dance, theater and film and has designed numerous works for Bill T. Jones since 1991. Her costumes have been exhibited at: The Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, The Prague Quadrennial of Performance Space and Design, Snug Harbor Cultural Center and Rockland Center for the Arts. She received a New York Dance and Performance Award (BESSIE) for her body of work in 1990 and she has also been included on a number of Choreographer/Creator BESSIE Awards. She received a 2008 Charles Flint Kellogg Arts and Letters Award from Bard College. Prince teaches Costume Design at Sarah Lawrence College where she is also the Costume Shop Supervisor.
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