Jody Christopherson
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Photo by Theo Cote |
La MaMa is proud to present the world premiere of now my hand is ready for my heart: intimate histories, the newest work from Nicky Paraiso, an award-winning 40-year veteran of the New York City performance community. In a deep exploration of an artist’s life, Paraiso investigates aging, identity, sexuality, class and race. Directed by MacArthur Fellow John Jesurun, now my hand is ready for my heart: intimate histories is also a multi-disciplinary celebration of an artistic community as it grows older and continues to make work, both individually and with each other. Paraiso is joined by choreographer/dancers Irene Hultman, Jon Kinzel, Vicky Shick, and Paz Tanjuaquio in performance and as collaborators. now my hand is ready for my heart: intimate histories is scheduled to run at La MaMa’s Ellen Stewart Theatre (66 E 4th St) from March 22 through April 7.
my hand is ready for my heart: intimate histories”, and why this
your most ambitious show to date?
whose work deals in autobiographical-confessional storytelling, especially in
shows like Asian Boys (1994) and House/Boy (2004),
this time I wanted to be onstage with other performers. I brought together a
group of individual choreographer/dancers who were experts in their own works,
and who also have appeared in the work of other esteemed choreographers. These
choreographer/dancers are Irene Hultman, Jon Kinzel, Vicky Shick and Paz
Tanjuaquio, whose choreographic work is located within the downtown post-modern
dance community. So, my dilemma finally was how to continue telling my story in
new & surprising ways, while working with performers who work mainly with
their bodies and the way those bodies move through space and time. I asked
playwright/visual designer John Jesurun to direct, and to give his own very
individual, aesthetic stamp to the overall production. The work, which will
premiere on Friday March 22nd 2019, is already completely different from what I
could have imagined working alone. As a theater director and outside eye, John
Jesurun has found a way to edit and weave my autobiographical storytelling with
the four choreographer/dancers’ individual, specific ways of moving into
something surprising and theatrically compelling.
you ever made?
something non-performative to relate here, but in lieu of naming that elusive
“best thing,” I would say that House/Boy, my last
full-evening performance work is probably something I made (with director
Ralph B. Pena) which I’m still happy with and proud of.
most challenging ways the theater landscape has changed over the past 40
years?
performer is still the most important part of a theater landscape, but I do
love the work of individual theater artists, directors and a new generation of
playwrights who are expanding the form and surprising us in myriad ways,
redefining and revitalizing theater as well as utilizing new technologies and
media to inform their stories and narratives: e.g, Directors Ivo van Hove
(Belgium/Netherlands), Romeo Castellucci (Italy), Rachel Chavkin, Charlotte
Brathwaite, Andrew Schneider, Alan Lucien Oyen (Norway), playwrights Brandon
Jacobs-Jenkins, Jackie Sibblies Drury, Kristine Haruna Lee, Taylor Mac, Annie
Baker, Will Eno, Lucas Hnath, Adam Bock, composers Dane Terry, Heather
Christian, Matthew Dean Marsh, M. Lamar, Nick Hallett, choreographers Raja
Feather Kelly, David Neumann, Miguel Gutierrez, Michelle Boule, Jonathan
Gonzalez, Beth Gill, to name only a few.
some incredible people and you yourself are a very influential theater maker.
What matters most to you about legacy?
essential to maintaining knowledge of our art- and theater/dance/performance
histories. An inter-generational dialogue between elder and younger generations is
also a necessary development and tool to acknowledge previous generations’
accomplishments while paving the way to the new. There is a precedent of
performers and performance art which doesn’t get published and/or filmed and
there is also a need for Oral Histories to combat these gaps and holes in our
knowledge. (See La MaMa Archive and also Primary Stages’ Oral History Project.)
thing you would make if there were no limitations?
would probably be some epic performance music-dance theater with durational
aspect with huge aspirations and presumptions of changing and saving the world.
I’m writing this with a sense of irony and that thinking big on a smaller scale
is probably more pragmatic and doable.
recent “Mount Olympus” (acknowledging all the controversy that
entails and is encumbered with) and also the bracing dance-theater work of
Nature Theater of Oklahoma. Or within the dance world, Norwegian choreographer
Mia Habib’s “Ali – A Physical Poem of Protest,” coming to La MaMa
Moves! Dance Festival in May 2019, and the dance-theater work of Alan Lucien
Oyen (also Norway).
you would give yourself, Nicky Paraiso, a theater maker just starting out 40
years ago?
redundant).
Jody Christopherson is a New York based Performer, Writer, Photographer, Artistic Director of the So-fi Festival and the Creator/ Editor in Cheif of The New York Theatre Review, for which she has the pleasure of interviewing all kinds of incredible theater artists.