
Kidd Pivot: Revisor
Thursday, Mar. 21 & Friday, Mar. 22,ย 7:30 p.m. Thu./8 p.m. Fri., $37ย
UNCโs Memorial Hall, Chapel Hill
Working with Crystal Pite is intense. By now, that may not come as much of a surprise to Triangle audiences, whom the Canadian choreographer has repeatedly chilled and challenged with her unsettling visions of contemporary life and loss.
When Nederlands Dans Theatre performed The Second Person at UNC in 2011, a wooden puppet behind a mike stand narrated an uncanny tale in which characters depicted as families, friends, and lovers of the grammatical second personโyouโwere being swallowed up in an impersonal, black-suited city crowd. Three years later, stark mobile searchlights surrounded Cedar Lake Contemporary Balletโs dancers in Ten Duets on a Theme of Rescue at the American Dance Festival.ย
Then, Piteโs own company, Kidd Pivot, shocked ADF audiences in 2017 with her and playwright Jonathon Youngโs Betroffenheit, a carnival ride through a glitzy underworld of grief that suggested a David Lynchโdirected version of Bob Fosseโs All That Jazz. And last year, Nederlands Dans Theatre executed Pite and Youngโs subsequent tale of ruthless executive-suite reckoning, The Statement.ย
This week, Carolina Performing Arts presents the U.S. premiere of their latest work. In a change-up, Revisor, which CPA co-commissioned, is a farce based on Nikolai Gogolโs 1836 satire, The Government Inspector. According to press the new work has already received, laughs are abundant as a crafty civil servant gleefully hoodwinks the corrupt provincial government leaders who have mistaken him for a state auditor. Still, the creation of work, according to Eric Beauchesne, Kidd Pivotโs associate artistic director, has been consuming.ย
โThereโs a lot of information to process and deal with,โ Beauchesne says. โ[Pite] is a fast worker, so the whole team has to pick up the pace and make sure theyโre on the same train as her.โ
Then comes the challenge of performing Piteโs choreography. Beauchesne recalls being wiped out by the end of performances, not only by the physical demands, but by the emotional content.ย
โItโs never just a โsoft and releaseโ kind of approach,โ he says. โShe loves physicality, the result of physical effort, and I would say the same thing for the emotional angle. Itโs exhilarating because we go so far โฆ but itโs also exhausting.โ
Still, Piteโs background as a dancer and her knowledge of anatomy have enabled her to create organic movement that allows dancers to enter demanding territory in a healthy way. Since her work is so well constructed, Beauchesne notes, โEven though it can push you really, really far, usually it feels quite good to dance.โ
Beauchesne came late to dance himself: After seeing his first dance at age sixteen, he started ballet lessons two years later. But following a meteoric rise, the award-winning performer worked with professional ballet companies in Canada and Germany before joining Kidd Pivot fifteen years ago. As the groupโs associate artistic director, Beauchesne now reconstructs Piteโs repertoire on major companies around the world.ย
Heโs witnessed the three-time winner of the Olivier Award, Englandโs version of the Tony, integrate an increasing array of art forms into her work over the years. Since dance and theater have different strengths, Pite โlikes to gather and work with as many tools as possible to say what she wants to say,โ Beauchesne says. โCrystal is first and foremost a communicator. She wants to tell a story; whether itโs a narrative or figurative story, sheโs a storyteller.โ
And sheโs using a broad range of genres and approaches to tell them. In Revisor, after succinctly staging Gogolโs actual farce theatrically, with performers lip-syncing the prerecorded dialogue of vocal actors, the work then โdeconstructs and reinspects it,โ Beauchesne says. As in Betroffenheit, the initial setting, costumes, and most of the dialogue are gradually excised, leaving the central movements and motifs unanchored in a specific situation, context, or world.ย
โItโs a different mirror,โ Beauchesne says. โIf we use different ways to approach the same material, people will relate to the work differently, and see themselves differently in the work. It will reveal something different from the staged farce to the deconstructed farce.โ ย ย
Though some have connected Revisor and The Statement to Donald Trump, both projects were begun before his presidency, which points to the timelessness of certain iniquitous character types.ย
โItโs not about him. Itโs about human foibles and human corruption,โ says Beauchesne, who nevertheless acknowledges that Piteโs work has become more politically engaged over the years. In The Statement, a crisis-management team is tweaking a disaster in another country for its own benefit, and 2017โs Flight Pattern dealt with the global refugee crisis.ย
โI donโt think weโre talking about an artist who had an epiphany and decided to become a political artist,โ Beauchesne says. โThe work has just evolved that way. Of course itโs timely to talk about corruption and imposture. Itโs always been timely. Thatโs why Gogol wrote the play in 1836. Classics are classic for a reason.โ


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