Tory Vazquez, James Hannaham, Scott Shepherd, Rinne Groff. Photo by Clemens Scharre


Susie Sokol, Scott Shepherd. Photo by Clemens Scharre


Scott Shepherd, James Hannaham, Jonathan Feinberg, Susie Sokol, Leo Marks. Photo by Alison Cornyn



Leo Marks, James Hannaham, Scott Shepherd, Jonathan Feinberg, Susie Sokol. Photo by Alison Cornyn


Leo Marks, Susie Sokol, Jonathan Feinberg, Tory Vazquez, Rinne Groff, James Hannaham. Photo by Clemens Scharre



Illustration from the New Yorker, September 15, 1997

Cab Legs

 

Cab Legs infuses a classic love story with frantic choreography from Indian movie musicals and Betty Boop cartoons, set to Cumbia music from Columbia. The show is an early attempt by ERS to mount a conventional play. After choosing the work of a familiar and well-renowned 20th Century American playwright, the company utterly failed to find a satisfying way to perform the work as written. Instead, the actors, having memorized the lines, were instructed to paraphrase the text anew with each performance. This increasingly challenging task created a tone of awkward intensity and managed to capture the essence of the strained communication between the play’s two romantic leads.

Before discovering the idea of paraphrasing a well-known play, the ensemble had concentrated on creating dances from both Indian musicals and 1930s cartoons. In an early work-in-progress, this dance material was interspersed with periods of prolonged silence during which the actors would occasionally mutter under their breath to each other. This early structural idea was inspired by the daily routine of firefighters, as they waited to leap into action. The play (modified and paraphrased) was then dropped in to this existing dramatic structure.

Performed only in intimate spaces, much of the dialogue was spoken at a volume just above a whisper. This was ERS’s first piece to be performed outside of New York City and was the first ERS piece to tour Europe, premiering at The Belluard-Bolwerk Festival in Swtizerland in July 1997.

 

Press

Performing Arts Journal May 1998

Some Sort Of Awakening (Unabridged Version)


Performing Arts Journal May 1998

Some Sort Of Awakening (Abridged)


de Volkskrant May 25, 1998

New York's ERS Shows That The Story Isn't What Counts (English Translation)


de Volkskrant May 25, 1998

New Yorkse ERS Toont Dat Het Verhaal Er Niet Toe Doet


Le Soir May 25, 1998

An Unstoppable Eros-Water Romance (English Translation)


Le Soir May 25, 1998

Une Imparable Romance À L'eau D'eros


Performing Arts Journal November 1997

North America - Full Article


Performing Arts Journal November 1997

North America


Salzburger Nachrichten August 13, 1997

The Hard-To-Achieve Ease (English Translation)


Salzburger Nachrichten August 13, 1997

Das Schwer Machbare Leichtfüßige


Ensemble

  • Peter Ackerman
  • Steve Bodow
  • Leo Marks
  • Rinne Groff
  • James Hannaham
  • Scott Shepherd
  • Susie Sokol
  • Tory Vazquez
Jonathan Feinberg originated the role now played by Leo Marks. Leslie Buxbaum played "Maggie" in Berlin.  
  • Director John Collins and Steve Bodow
  • Lighting Designer Clay Shirky
  • Sound Designer Blake Koh
  • Choreographer Katherine Profeta and ERS
  • Costumer Colleen Werthmann and Carson Kreitzer
  • Stage Manager Zoe E. Rotter
Jay Worthington designed lighting for "Catastrophe!"