Vindicator Logo

Space dance thrills crowd at Ingenuity

Saturday, July 15, 2006


NASA helped with the production, supplying space suits.
CLEVELAND (AP) -- Dancer and choreographer Sarah Morrison likes to think of space flight as especially thrilling when it's part of a child's dream.
She has turned her fancy into the concept for a dance this weekend before a big-screen backdrop of video from NASA's space shuttle Discovery mission in 2000 and pictures of planets.
The 25-minute presentation, "Rendezvous," was being performed Friday and Saturday nights in downtown Cleveland at Ingenuity, the city's second annual arts and technology festival. Discovery is currently on a mission to the International Space Station to make repairs and deliver supplies, scheduled to return next week.
Morrison produced the dance with the help of astronaut Pamela Ann Melroy as a volunteer consultant and about eight hours of video provided by NASA.
A conversation with Melroy helped cement the concept.
"I was really getting goose bumps when she mentioned that the future astronauts who will eventually go to Mars are the children today," said Morrison, 31 and the mother of a 2-year-old daughter. "It made me think about when I was a child and watching a blastoff on television and thinking, 'Wow!' Now it seems like people forget just how amazing that is."
Story
In the dance's story, three children are dreaming of what it would be like to be on a space mission. Five other dancers wearing NASA-provided clean-room white jumpsuits emerge from the bed and portray a space team. The children start off in pajamas and end up in brightly colored, tight-fitting outfits.
The dance movements are a combination of traditional ballet moves and more athletic modern dance steps. They range from expressing the force of a launch to the gentle flow of a space walk. "We have a lot of very slow movements to give an appearance of floating," Morrison said.
"The beautiful thing about art is people are allowed to feel what they want to feel when they see it," she said.
Experience
Melroy, 44, has an interest in dance and has performed a few orbital ballet moves in microgravity.
In a statement in the dance's program, she says: "Being in microgravity changes everything, the way your body works and the way you move in relation to objects around you. You become a world class dancer, until you bump into a wall."
Morrison studied the astronauts' movements on the video of the 2000 mission to the space station. Melroy was a pilot on the flight.
"I did a lot of reading about her, as well as viewing all of the footage of her floating in space while putting her hair in a ponytail, which looked very complicated, and even performing a pirouette," Morrison said.
Melroy is helping provide ground support for the current shuttle mission and did not have time to take questions about the dance, said NASA spokesman David DeFelice.
DeFelice said the only other similar collaboration NASA has had with a dance production was through the Centennial of Flight Commission. "Wild Blue Yonder," a Wolf Trap-commissioned performance, was presented in 2003.
Morrison and her small dance group, MorrisonDance, try to raise public awareness of dance through performance and collaboration. She also works consulting at a psychology research program at Case Western Reserve University.
The company and NASA collaborated for about 10 months on this performance, and the festival funded the dance at $3,500. Morrison did not know whether the dance would be presented again after this weekend.
The obvious limits to space flight simulation don't bother Morrison, who plays one of the children.
"It's not really about simulation," Morrison said. "Why simulate when you can watch the video? And the video in and of itself is beautiful to watch. It's up to us to create an artistic rendering of how it inspires us and hopefully pass that along to the audience."