Jim Nue's THE FLOATONES Set for 20th Anniversary Revival at La MaMa, Now thru 5/10
In Jim Neu's musical "The Floatones," four rather strange characters meet at their encounter group and decide the best way to get better is through show business. They form a vocal quartet on the cutting edge of a new fusion between entertainment and self-help. Their night club act shares their group insights in speech and song, interweaving their individual stories, creating a post-Chorus Line. "The Floatones" debuted in 1995 and will be revived by La MaMa E.T.C. on the play's 20th anniversary, today, May 1 to 10, 2015 co-directed by Catherine Galasso and Keith McDermott. It is the first production of a Jim Neu play since his death in 2010.
Playwright Jim Neu (1943-2010) was a major voice in Downtown Theater who specialized in an elliptical take on language. His plays and musicals ride on a wry, cool humor that is intelligently zany. "The Floatones" stands out in his body of work for its unique abundance of bon mots and intellectual calisthenics. While the characters claim to be "coherency-neutral," their observations about themselves and their world often make a strange sense ("I identified with people who didn't remember me," "I've never seen one thing lead to another so graphically before," "Have you ever seen a mob standing in line? Quite a sight. Losing control without losing your place."). Their reality is in the crack between what you know and what you think you know.The pleasure is the logic of the word play that supports this, as when the foursome sings:
We're post plot
We're coherency neutral
We mean it not Claiming to be "motivation-free," the characters are obsessed with identity, personal positioning and post-communication, uttering such confessions as "I've pursued my career with a monomentality, and it was beginning to show" and "I've been on a role, but in the wrong direction." They reassure each other with such mottos as "relaxity works," "You're only as good as you make yourself sound" and "every moment is always what's left of the rest of your future." The creative challenge in Neu's musicals was to adapt such mind-twisters to song lyrics. The original production was directed by Rocky Bornstein (of Otrabanda Company) and was performed by Bill Rice, Mary Shultz, Keith McDermott and Jim Neu. When it debuted, it was Neu's second musical and the successor to his first tuner, "Dark Pocket," which had been presented by The Club at La MaMa in 1994 to approving reviews. The Native (L.C. Cole) wrote, "It was minimalist writing and acting at one of the best performance levels around....This was controlled chaos, manipulated madness, intellectual idiocy, from which a lot of deconstruction-minded performers and writers could well learn....The fun of course was entirely in the stylish ride and the ideas it took us by." "The Floatones" received no reviews, but the show fortified Neu's brand among a growing cadre of Neu-philes. It also brought Keith McDermott into the cadre of Neu-performers when he replaced John Nesci in the cast. McDermott had met Neu in Robert Wilson's company and went on to direct all nine of Neu's subsequent plays.
Jess Barbagallo has collaborated with Big Dance Theater, Julia May Jonas/Nellie Tinder, Theatre of a Two-Headed Calf, The Builders Association, Hoi Polloi, The Drunkard's Wife, Casey Llewellyn, Katherine Brook/Tele-Violet and Andrea Geyer. She is a founding member of Half Straddle and Red Terror Squad. She has been a guest artist/teacher at Brown, Princeton and NYU and is a 2014 NY Live Arts Context Notes Writer-in-Residence. She curates for the Little Theater performance series at Dixon Place. She holds an MFA from Brooklyn College. (www.homoflix.wordpress.com)
Joshua William Gelb is a New York based performer, director, and librettist. He has performed with Little Lord, Tele-Violet, Moe Yousuf & Allison Lyman, Designated Movement, Prelude, Other Forces, Incubator Arts, Dixon Place, Ars Nova, and in several Target Margin Labs. (www.joshuawilliamgelb.com) Larissa Velez-Jackson is a Brooklyn-based choreographer and multimedia artist. She has presented work at Roulette, New Museum of Contemporary Art, DTW, Danspace, Abrons Arts Center and Chocolate Factory Theater. In 2011, she launched a song-and-dance collaboration with her husband, Jon Velez-Jackson, called Yackez, "The World's Most Loveable Hip Hop Duo." She was a Movement Research Artist in Residence '12-'13, a SPARC resident '13 with the LMCC and most recently an El Museo Del Barrio Artist in Residence '14. (www.larissavelez.com) Greg Zuccolo trained with Royal Winnipeg Ballet and danced with the company before moving to Belgium to appear with Les Operettes Royale de Wallonie. In NYC, he has danced with Stanley Love, Tere O'Connor, John Jasperse and Sarah Michelson and won a Bessie Award. In Europe, he has also appeared with Baryshnikov's White Oak, Michael Laub and Remote Control Productions. He has performed in films by Ilya Chaiken, Matthew Barney and Nicholas Elliot and plays by Tina Satter and Sibyl Kempson. His own writings include the dance-theater works "Calvin Klein by Greg Zuccolo" with Hilary Clark, "Busy Nights" and "Too Much Too Soon."
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