Mizerany Mixes Fluidity, Provocation
- Share via
No one has ever accused dancer-choreographer Michael Mizerany of not taking risks. Besides making use of full frontal male nudity, heavy homosexual osculations and daring contortions that would do a yogi proud, Mizerany’s work also has a fluidity and core of authenticity that quickens the senses. Such was the case Thursday night at Highways Performance Space, when Mizerany Dance presented three provocative works.
“The Box,” a premiere set to Steve Reich’s Minimalist score, was a sensual duet between Mizerany and radiant Lisa Gillespie. Revolving around Marco De Leon’s prop--a large kinetic sculpture that could have been a coffee table, a perforated sarcophagus or Cleopatra’s barge, depending on its position--the pair alternately rocked in and around it. Away from the box, the couple also rocked: Mizerany hoisting Gillespie in a series of gravity-defying lifts before the couple moved in gentle unison.
A reworked “Necessary Depravity” found Mizerany, Bogar Martinez and Johnny Tu in a creepy scenario involving a stripper (Mizerany) and two captors who attempt to convert their gay prey to heterosexuality. Martinez, however--a closeted Calvin Klein model come to glorious life with leaping push-ups and frenzied hip-swiveling--lusts after Mizerany, while a steadfast Tu, as hellbent scientist, works his wicked wiles.
Mizerany’s Horton Award-winning 1996 solo “Bump in the Road,” usually performed by the choreographer, held up beautifully in Jeff Bulkley’s hyperactive, hilarious delivery.
*
Mizerany Dance, Highways Performance Space, 1651 18th St., Santa Monica, tonight and Sunday at 8:30 p.m. (310) 315-1459. $16.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.