Penelope Freeh's 2007 Minnesota Fringe Festival hit We'll Survive if We Don't Protect Ourselves gets new life at the Southern Theater June 17-19, 2010. The James Sewell Ballet dancer and artistic associate navigates between safety and danger in an environment of instability for a quartet of dancers: Christine Maginnis, Eddie Oroyan, Stephen Schroder and Freeh herself. Acts of daring in this tour de force reveal the human heart - opening, breaking, and breaking open. Musical selections include works by radical baroque composer Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber, Icelandic band Skárren ekkert, Philip Glass and Radiohead.
We'll Survive... was originally created specifically for the atrium of the Grain Belt Bottling House in Northeast Minneapolis. "There was a balcony from which the dancers hung, immediately setting up an element of danger," said Freeh. "I look forward to extracting the essential elements of the piece, placing them in the Southern and rediscovering the work's next evolution.""I am thrilled to be sharing an evening [with] Megan," said Freeh. "Our work is compatible and yet utterly different. I think we both begin with a cerebral approach but then quickly slip into the tools of our craft: generating movement based on our concept, extracting character as appropriate and composing/directing on a macro level."Drawing inspiration from photography and video, 2009 Momentum artist Megan Mayer's Premiere of We tried to throw the light incorporates a keen eye for detail and the sensibility that less is more. Using a tactile approach to choreography, interacting with and responding to architecture, light and inanimate objects, Mayer's newest creation investigates the unease and sense of discovering that accompany self-scrutiny. She is also working to reconfigure electric moments from ‘60s foreign films by way of The Lawrence Welk Show with wry humor, and skillfully mix an intimate onstage "family" of performers with technical, behind-the-scenes elements traditionally found offstageVideos