Choreographer Ayelen Parolin doesn't like to smooth things over. She prefers to avoid formatting. Starting with a deliberately limited choreographic vocabulary, she launches three dancers into an astonishing game of rhythm and construction, at once repetitive and always moving.
It's a labyrinthine game from which it's not so easy to emerge, because unfinished work and starting over are the basic rules. What about the music? It's up to the bodies to invent it, to imagine it, to play it, in search of a vital pulse. Feet pound the floor, a stick marks the rhythm, even Besame Mucho is sung.
At first surprised by the lack of sophistication, we end up marvelling and laughing at this curious, uninhibited exploration of the simple pleasure of dancing. With the power and deeply human sincerity of a child, Simple is a place where anything is (still) possible, from the senseless to the dreamlike.
From age 8.
Show accessible to the deaf and hard of hearing.