A not to be missed water sustainability performance, titled Take This House (and Float it Away). In this original, tightly choreographed work of theatre, Sacramento waits for the next big flood. Situated at the meeting point of California's two major river systems, it sits protected by an intricate triangle of levees that dilapidates more every year. This time, it won't be poor, black people whose lives are ruined - the wealthy, white suburbs of Sacramento are first in line when the floodgates at Folsom Dam smash open.
From Stu and Marlene's floodplain living room, the aging couple scurries through their routines, unable to comprehend nature's effect on their safe, bounded suburban sphere. As Stu staves off ruin by expounding about his "groundbreaking research into gestures," Marlene extrapolates caffeinated flood solutions from newspaper headlines conflating staying informed with staying afloat.
Opening Acts:
"Hoprock" explores possible virtuosities in playing the "udderbot," an invented slide woodwind instrument composed of glass, rubber, and water. "Hoprock" arranges an original poem among extended vocal techniques, microtonality, and their relationship to this new instrument.
A collage of visual and audio imagery, "Water Finds its Way" uses storytelling, extended vocal techniques, and gesture to wind a path through personal and cultural narratives of water as a metaphor for experience.
The Change of State Project was founded in 2005 by Andrea del Moral and K. Qilo Matzen. In January, 2006, Change of State became a fiscally sponsored project of CounterPULSE.
For more information, or to "Pre-donate" visit:
http://www.bucketworks.org/civicrm/event/info?reset=1&id=161
Added by jaturner76 on April 16, 2009