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Mirra Banks film, Last Dance, documents a
collaboration between Pilobolus Dance Theatre and well-known childrens book
illustrator, Maurice Sendak. It offers a fascinating look into the creative process. More
like a war story than a backstage peek, the competing wills of the three participating
choreographers along with the even more well-known and equally opinionated Sendak amount
to the kind of battlefield tension that audiences never get a hint of from their velvet
chairs. The final product, "A Selection," is a gripping dance-theatre piece
based on a Holocaust idea. But the film makes it clear that the real human drama is in the
process of getting to the stage.
Given unlimited access to the rehearsal process, Banks writes in a
directors statement that the editing process (she had over 125 hours of footage)
offered her the opportunity to distill a "dramatic, rather than literal truth."
No stranger to theatrical endeavors, Sendaks mission, from the outset was to come up
with some kind of narrative, using the contributions of three choreographers and six
amazing dancers, based loosely on the children of the fake concentration camp
Theresienstadt, with music by Holocaust victim, Hans Krasa.
Pilobolus, on the other hand, had rarely worked in a narrative
form, and usually chose music after the dance had already been set. Founded as a communal
art project by three Dartmouth College students, Jonathan Wolken, Robby Barnett and
Michael Tracy, along with their teacher, Alison Chase, in 1971, the group has gone on to
become a world renowned dance company known for its unusual use of the human form, and for
its playful theatricality.
Working with Sendak was a challenge that the Pilobolus members hoped
would give them a shot of freshening after so many years as a collaborative unit. (Chase
did not participate in the project.) They claimed to be up for the assignment, but what
Bank captured on tape was the battle that actually occurred when the passions of all the
participants involved converged. The fact that a final product actually emerged (The New
York Times called it, "riveting
(with) stunning dramatic edge"), seems
almost miraculous based on the scenes of tension and conflict depicted by Bank.
- Michael Wade Simpson