{"title":"Crossing Collaborative Borders: The Making and Becoming of ÓRALE! by David Herrera Performance Company and El Vez, the Mexican Elvis","authors":"Karen Jean Martinson, Julia E. Chacón","doi":"10.1017/s0040557424000292","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p></p><p>Your time has come to fly</p><p>You have no borders</p><span>—El Vez, “Órale,” sung to the tune of “Bridge over Troubled Waters”</span><p></p><p>With brightly colored <span>papel picado</span> (cut paper banners), tissue flowers, and Latin American flags festooning the performance area at San Francisco's Z Space, David Herrera Performance Company's September 2023 event, <span>ÓRALE!,</span> promised fun and festivity. On its surface, the performance resembled a typical dance program, with an ensemble of ten dancers performing eleven separate pieces choreographed to songs from the catalog of El Vez, the Mexican Elvis, but an exciting hybrid form of movement theatre emerged through the interplay of live music, dance, and El Vez. Built around the music and performances of Robert Lopez, who has performed as El Vez for more than thirty years, <span>ÓRALE!</span> offered an opportunity for an intergenerational community of artists to find themselves in El Vez's work, and for Lopez to see his own vision reflected in the interpretations of the young dancers and choreographers involved. This article considers how <span>ÓRALE!</span> harnesses the creative possibilities of resisting the implied disciplinary borders that too often separate music, dance, and theatre performance. We begin by discussing the creative invitation that El Vez offers, to make clear how he uses his art as a form of world building, using popular culture to critique US American society, make visible the disparate cultural traditions that exist within US American cultural forms, and to envision new ways of being. We then discuss <span>ÓRALE!</span> following two different through lines: process and product. The collaborative process of <span>ÓRALE!</span> was a site of cultural, intergenerational, and geographic exchange, inviting both performers and audience into a genre-defying performance that raised critical questions around intermediality and transtemporality in the arts. As a process very much in development, the collaboration experimented with learning through doing that led to a performance event that was at times messy and at times magical. Following Elizabeth Ellsworth, <span>ÓRALE!</span> was an example of “knowledge in the making,” a fluid experience through which “the self is understood as a becoming, an emergence, and as continually in the making. This . . . moves us beyond a contemporary politics of difference based in semiotics and linguistics toward an experimental ‘pragmatics of becoming’ based on making and doing.” The event embodied a Muñozian process of disidentification to bring into being a utopian present, residing in this space of becoming and of knowledge in the making to reveal the complexities of Latinx subjectivity while rejecting essentialist understandings of race, ethnicity, and culture.</p>","PeriodicalId":42777,"journal":{"name":"THEATRE SURVEY","volume":"14 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"THEATRE SURVEY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1017/s0040557424000292","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Your time has come to fly
You have no borders
—El Vez, “Órale,” sung to the tune of “Bridge over Troubled Waters”
With brightly colored papel picado (cut paper banners), tissue flowers, and Latin American flags festooning the performance area at San Francisco's Z Space, David Herrera Performance Company's September 2023 event, ÓRALE!, promised fun and festivity. On its surface, the performance resembled a typical dance program, with an ensemble of ten dancers performing eleven separate pieces choreographed to songs from the catalog of El Vez, the Mexican Elvis, but an exciting hybrid form of movement theatre emerged through the interplay of live music, dance, and El Vez. Built around the music and performances of Robert Lopez, who has performed as El Vez for more than thirty years, ÓRALE! offered an opportunity for an intergenerational community of artists to find themselves in El Vez's work, and for Lopez to see his own vision reflected in the interpretations of the young dancers and choreographers involved. This article considers how ÓRALE! harnesses the creative possibilities of resisting the implied disciplinary borders that too often separate music, dance, and theatre performance. We begin by discussing the creative invitation that El Vez offers, to make clear how he uses his art as a form of world building, using popular culture to critique US American society, make visible the disparate cultural traditions that exist within US American cultural forms, and to envision new ways of being. We then discuss ÓRALE! following two different through lines: process and product. The collaborative process of ÓRALE! was a site of cultural, intergenerational, and geographic exchange, inviting both performers and audience into a genre-defying performance that raised critical questions around intermediality and transtemporality in the arts. As a process very much in development, the collaboration experimented with learning through doing that led to a performance event that was at times messy and at times magical. Following Elizabeth Ellsworth, ÓRALE! was an example of “knowledge in the making,” a fluid experience through which “the self is understood as a becoming, an emergence, and as continually in the making. This . . . moves us beyond a contemporary politics of difference based in semiotics and linguistics toward an experimental ‘pragmatics of becoming’ based on making and doing.” The event embodied a Muñozian process of disidentification to bring into being a utopian present, residing in this space of becoming and of knowledge in the making to reveal the complexities of Latinx subjectivity while rejecting essentialist understandings of race, ethnicity, and culture.
大卫-埃雷拉表演公司于 2023 年 9 月在旧金山 Z Space 举办了一场名为《ÓRALE!》的活动,活动现场挂满了色彩鲜艳的剪纸横幅、纸巾花和拉美国旗,充满了欢乐和节日气氛。从表面上看,这场演出类似于一个典型的舞蹈节目,由十位舞者根据墨西哥猫王 El Vez 的歌曲目录编排了 11 个独立的曲目,但通过现场音乐、舞蹈和 El Vez 的相互作用,出现了一种令人兴奋的混合运动剧场形式。ÓRALE!"围绕罗伯特-洛佩兹(Robert Lopez)的音乐和表演展开,罗伯特-洛佩兹已作为 El Vez 表演了 30 多年,ÓRALE!"为跨代艺术家群体提供了一个机会,让他们在 El Vez 的作品中找到自我,同时也让洛佩兹看到自己的愿景在年轻舞者和编舞家的演绎中得以体现。本文探讨了《ÓRALE!》如何利用创造性的可能性,抵制音乐、舞蹈和戏剧表演之间隐含的学科界限。我们首先讨论 El Vez 发出的创作邀请,以阐明他如何将自己的艺术作为一种世界建设形式,利用流行文化批判美国社会,彰显美国文化形式中存在的不同文化传统,并设想新的存在方式。接下来,我们将按照两条不同的主线讨论 ÓRALE!:过程和产品。ÓRALE!"的合作过程是一个文化、代际和地域交流的场所,它邀请表演者和观众共同参与一场类型突破的表演,提出了关于艺术的跨媒介性和跨时空性的关键问题。作为一个正在发展中的过程,这次合作尝试了在实践中学习,最终产生了一场时而混乱时而神奇的表演活动。伊丽莎白-埃尔斯沃思认为,《ÓRALE!》是 "创造中的知识 "的典范,是一种流动的体验,通过这种体验,"自我被理解为一种成为、一种出现,以及持续的创造。这......使我们超越了以符号学和语言学为基础的当代差异政治,走向了以制作和实践为基础的实验性'成为的语用学'"。该活动体现了穆尼奥斯式的身份认同过程,将乌托邦式的当下带入现实,驻足于这一 "成为 "和 "创造中的知识 "的空间,揭示拉丁裔主体性的复杂性,同时摒弃对种族、民族和文化的本质主义理解。