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Dancing the Mouth

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  4. I open my mouth to say something, anything, but then two-year-old William, Jr., totters in.
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  6. The cook felt the corners of his mouth with his thumbs.

Speech is movement. Like any movement, speech has the potential for strength, agility, and grace. All these parts move: tongue, teeth, upper jaw, lower jaw, gums, hard palate, soft palate, cheeks and lips. We sense this movement, moment by moment. The interaction of these moving parts, combined with breath and voice, articulates vocal sound. We hear that sound moment to moment. The movement and the sound com­bined affect our psyche and change our reality. We respond to that change with the next movement, the next feeling, the next sound. We're tuning into the loop of action/awareness /action.

o the instrument sparks the psyche

o the psyche sparks the instrument

Just as Eyes Closed has the potential to focus attention on one aspect of the self, so does the voice. The mind must quiet down so that atten­tion can rest on each moment of sound, so that one can discover the sen­suality that waits.

Take the word "sit." There are infinite possibilities. Worlds. Say, "Sit." Now, say, "Sit," as if you mean: Hello; or, I love you; or, Get out of here; or, Come hack; or, I'm fed up; or, Stop that; or, I'm dizzy, I'm terrified, I'm dissolving; or, I'm speechless, confused, constricted, choking.

As in the Mirroring exercise, Only Verbs offers students opportu­nity to look at belief relative to function and role. Here, the functions are simply to speak verbs, or respond with movement. Carrying out these functions may produce uncomfortable feelings associated with the roles of "being in command" and "being commanded." Feelings accompany­ing certain actions may lead to positions of power and oppression, and to roles of victor and victim. Through this exercise, students may see that such feelings are reflexive conditions, not necessarily relevant to their current experience, but generated from past occasions.

Once freed from habitual feelings about the roles being played, stu­dents can hear language as cues for choreography and maps for inner exploration. The mover and the speaker will then have infinite choice. They focus on their immediate experience and expression and bypass role identification.

5D. Say What You Do

Leave your partners. You'll be working alone, putting the two functions of the previous exercise together. You will be both speaker and mover, simul­taneously. Say a verb, preceded by the word "I," and perform the action that the word signifies. As you say, "I sit," you sit. As you say, "I stand, you stand etc. You are not speaking without movement and not moving without speech. The way the word is spoken and the way the action is exe­cuted happen at the same moment, with the same energy, feeling, and mean­ing. Experiment with changing your mind, which will change your expression, once or even several times, within the enunciation of a single verb.. You may pause between expressions, or inside each expression. When you're still, you will be silent. When you're silent, you will be still.

This has moved sound and movement into language. Saving, "I sit," and simultaneously sitting is a single action that emanates from the whole body as a single source. Neither speech, nor action lead. Finding this source takes some investigation, some practice. Students practice this until they feel secure in the technique, until there's no arbitrary move­ment and until the speech and the motion are bound exactly, and sur­rounded by silence and stillness. Once this happens, they are ready to explore this form in relationship.

5E. Performance Score: Say What You Do, Together

One pair out on the floor, the rest of us will be audience.

Both of you will now bring what you were just practicing into relationship. By saying what you are doing while you are doing it ("I" plus simple active verbs), you'll be in continuous response to each other. You're in a dialogue, alternating turns, maybe sometimes overlapping. You're watching and listening, in detail, constantly observing the cues that each other offers. Suppose your partner says, "I look," and looks away from you with abrupt alertness. You may respond with, "I look," and also look where they're looking, or anything else that comes to mind in response. You don't have to think anything up. Your partner is providing all the information that you need. Just believe them. In effect, they're telling you what to do. You only have to respond.

Listen to your partner's voice. Listen to your voices together. Hear the rhythmic and tonal patterns. Respond to your partner's shapes, changes, feelings. There's no missed beats between you.

Adding relationship to the detail-oriented technique of the Only Verbs exercise challenges students to remain conscious of their experience as they receive and respond to their partner's experience. All of this in front of an audience. There's a lot going on that's demand­ing attention.

The last exercise of the day is simple, a relief from the gathering demands.

5F. Performance Score: Bench: Head, Arm, Leg

I've put a bench out on the floor. Three people sit on the bench and face the audience. You can only do three actions: raise an arm, turn your head, or cross a leg. That's all. Interact with these three act,ons.

Detail

Language is eliminated. Students are left with hardly anything at all So it seems. Only three simple and common actions with which to build a world full of thoughts, feelings, desires, actions and responses. A world that's about three people sitting on a bench.

The details do it. The slightest movement describes an entire story. A head turns with a particular musicality and tension. An eyebrow lifts. An expression on a face changes and changes again, and we know the inner story.

Students, discover how little is needed. When action is stripped down, subtleties capture the focus. The slight turn of a hand may indicate a catastrophe.

Day Five leads students on a back-and-forth voyage. They travel from the inner mind, the personal, to the outer ensemble, the contex­tual, and from the inner world of language to the outer world of rela­tionship. They discover that details provide directive arrows as guides from internal awareness toward expressive composition. Back-and-forth, a see-saw of attention. They strive for a restful place, a fulcrum, a bal­anced center between all of their worlds.

They're picking, poking and looking at themselves. If what they're doing isn't enrapturing, nothing is gained. Analysis doesn't create change. It only adds information to the already existing over-abundance. Changes occur through awareness. Even though students stumble and bumble, analyze and try, they eventually, sooner or later, give up and start to play. Then all the trying, the practice, the intelligence and information-gath­ering, is laid aside. But it doesn't go away. It joins the cache of wisdom that directs their lives.


Day Six


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Читайте в этой же книге: B. Shape Alphabet 6 страница | E. Performance Score: Slow Motion Fight | Sound and Movement Mirror 1 страница | Sound and Movement Mirror 2 страница | Sound and Movement Mirror 3 страница | Sound and Movement Mirror 4 страница | Sound and Movement Mirror 5 страница | G. Performance Score: Threaded Solos | C. Performance Score: Dreams | The Body's Voice |
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A Way to Proceed:Body, Imagination, Memory| Pretend to Pretend

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