THE TIME
MACHINE
Founder/Co-ArtisticDirector Elizabeth Streb. Co-Artistic
Director/Director of Corporate Growth &Programs Cassandre Joseph. Chief
Operations Officer Shannon
Reynolds.Technical Director Matt
McAdon. Assistant Technical Director Jelani Lewis. Audio Engineer Paul Piekarz. Co-ArtisticDirector/ActionHero CassandreJoseph. SeniorActionHero JackieCarlson. Action
Hero Nailah Cunningham. ActionHero D’SherrickWilliams.ActionHero Andrea Laisure. Action
Hero Sarah Perez.Action
Hero Kai Rizzuto.Action
Hero Jaylen TaylorAction
Hero Luciany Germán Images Ralph Alswang and Stephanie Berger. Her
Majesty’s Theatre. Adelaide Festival 24.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Streb Extreme Action’s The Time Machine is an homage to the
work of Elizabeth Streb and her groundbreaking invention of Extreme Action
physical theatre. Nine dancers cum gymnastic physical theatre performers
demonstrate the routines invented by Strebs in 1985 and developed during a
career spanning fifty years. Her work ranges from the breathtaking to the
dangerous, pushing the limits of physical risk and endurance. Her dancers combine
the grace of the dance with the strength and prowess of the action
hero. They are young, superbly athletic and highly disciplined as they defy gravity
and push the boundaries of dance. Their work is a carefully choreographed
display of trust, timing and tension.
The Time Machine is a display of skill and physical adroitness. What it lacks is theatrical ingenuity. It lacks the magic of Cirque de Soleil or Gravity and Other Myths. It references the action movies and the slapstick stunts of the silent movies but fails to imbue undisputed skill with theatrical flair. It is skill without concept, a fifty minutes display of highly trained physicality that engaged the yelpers nearby but would have benefited from a dramaturge to inject theatricality in the spirit of an action story or a slapstick scenario. At fifty minutes it was an impressive display of skills, rather than a theatrical moment of magic.