Chicago Sun-Times

Orpheus meets Clue in Rooming House

- By OLIVER SAVA @OliverSava

The world is littered with adaptation­s of the tale of Orpheus and Eurydice, but the Greek myth is just a seed for the creator- directors of Rooming House, Julia Rhoads of Lucky Plush Production­s and Leslie Buxbaum Danzig, a cofounder of 500 Clown. Over its brisk 75 minutes their light- footed, sometimes cheeky production grows into something expansive and challengin­g, exploring deeper aspects of storytelli­ng and human behavior through Lucky Plush’s signature blend of insight and play.

Rooming House begins with the ensemble of six dancers pondering the myth to establish the central question of the show: Why did it happen? The “it” is a constantly changing situation, starting with the mythologic­al moment when Orpheus looks behind him on his journey out of the underworld, dooming his young wife to death when she is steps away from resurrecti­on. The ensemble enact various interpreta­tions of this scenario through dance, including one version where a vogueing Orpheus performs a death drop after encounteri­ng three mean girls representi­ng the Fates.

As the ensemble explore Orpheus’s decision from different angles, they come up with a new system for examining any situation motivated by human behavior. Based on the board game Clue, this system looks at who is responsibl­e, what motivates them, and at which point in the narrative. Was it the action taker fueled by duty in the backstory? Perhaps a provocateu­r driven by fear during the event? Each narrative point is represente­d by a space on the blank stage, and each space has its own choreograp­hed sequence that dictates how the performers move.

This system is complicate­d, and the show acknowledg­es that. But it also provides a fascinatin­g framework for the creative team to break down individual components of a consequent­ial moment while energizing the story analysis with sharp, emotive movement. This analysis becomes more personal as the production delves into moments from the performers’ lives: Rodolfo Sánchez Sar- racino’s decision to leave Cuba, Michel Rodriguez Cintra cutting ties with a childhood friend, Elizabeth Luse’s father stopping a robbery in progress.

Luse’s story inspires a fabulous song from Aaron R. White, who struts around the stage as he makes a case for a two- piece swimsuit as a responsibl­e party. And while all the performers are engaging and multifacet­ed, Cintra is an especially exuberant presence onstage, his bubbly enthusiasm expressed at one point in a sequence that has him swept off the ground to soar above his costars.

Throughout, the action moves in all sorts of unexpected directions into spontaneou­s bouts of movement. The result is a dynamic production as intricate and slick as it is open and seemingly off- the- cuff.

 ?? ALAN EPSTEIN ?? Lucky Plush dancers Aaron R. White, Kara Brody, Michel Rodriguez Cintra, and Meghann Wilkinson.
ALAN EPSTEIN Lucky Plush dancers Aaron R. White, Kara Brody, Michel Rodriguez Cintra, and Meghann Wilkinson.

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