Gossipy Ladies Credit: Pak Han Foto
This one's for the ladies.
  • Pak Han Foto
  • This one’s for the ladies.

So I Married Abraham Lincoln is a show of many dimensions. At times it feels like a staging of The Yellow Wallpaper: like a documentation of hysteria, with women running in circles and crawling on the floor, who then take to a chair and sit creepily still. Itโ€™s sometimes uncomfortable and tongue-in-cheek, often eerie, even funny, but always curious. Itโ€™s partly a psychological reckoningโ€”in dance-formโ€”and partly about the mere perception of the female brain and female normalcy; So I Married Abraham Lincoln uses the mercurial life of Mary Todd Lincolnโ€”who was institutionalized several years after her husbandโ€™s assassinationโ€”to look at the expectations of women.

One of the first things youโ€™ll notice about Paufve|dance is the range of their female dancers, specifically their age range. Itโ€™s not often you see dancers older than 30, but Paufve puts special focus on them, proclaiming on their website a โ€œparticular investment in middle-aged dancer,โ€ asking, โ€œWhy is so much concert dance relegated to virile, youthful bodies of a specific aesthetic, to narrow notions of fashion industry beauty?โ€ Taking that fashion reference further, during one segment of this particular performance, the women parade down the stage like a run-way, in single-file, announcing names with loud grin in a sarcastic, flurried reference to a pageant’s runway.

Observe:

So I Married Abraham Lincoln is performed with minimal staging, at Conduit Dance’s fourth floor studio in southwest. Dangling from the ceiling is a wave of ceramic teacups (which offer sporadic clinking and tinkling sound effects during the show). Hung from the window are long and lacy 19th-century-type dresses, and behind them are glimpses of downtownโ€™s skyscrapers. The performance includes a participatory sรฉance; even so, the atmosphere isnโ€™t entirely Victorianโ€”the music rings with the Pixies, Public Image Ltd, and traditional spirituals, sung in a chorus by the dancers. Paufve dance, based in Oakland, has a core of seven dancers, and eight Portland dancers who have been included in this performance.

Choreographer Randee Paufve was recently featured on NPR, as part of a worthwile series on how artists make money. Paufve spoke earlier today, as part of Conduitโ€™s ongoing Dance Uncovered lectures. (Also notable: Conduit will begin their DANCE+ Performance Series, in July.) Tonight is Portland’s last chance to see of So I Married Abraham Lincoln. It’s a show with a different, and tenacious, perspective, both in its subject matter and its treatment, and that alone makes it worth a watch.
Conduit Dance, Inc. 918 SW Yamhill. 8:30 pm. $14-17.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=HVDJhYY8cUY