How does human intimacy fare in a world bewitched by speed and technology? This question is central to “Stardust,” David Roussève’s most recent dance/theater work, which is scheduled for its local premiere at Peak Performances, February 6-9.
Using a sound score that juxtaposes the creamy warm romanticism of Nat King Cole with the rough-edged, hip-hop-based original music of d. Sabela grimes, Roussève’s choreography is divided between lush, jazz-inflected dancing, and the frenetic, angular expression of the protagonist’s anxious mind. The dance, in which grief and joy, beauty, and horror collide, marks Roussève’s first work without spoken text, and the first without the choreographer in the leading role. In Stardust, the protagonist, a gay African American teen, is never seen on stage; his emotional and spiritual situation is expressed in unanswered text messages that are projected onto a screen.
Cari Ann Shim Sham’s video art, serving as a backdrop for Rousseve and his 10 performers, illuminates the tension between the heightened sense of connection and concurrent loneliness created by the cyber-age. Lucy Mae San Pablo Burns was the dramaturge. Christopher Kuhl designed the lighting and Leah Pieh, the costumes.