‘Immersive’ Dance-Theater Performance Captures a Year of Tumult in American History

‘Immersive’ Dance-Theater Performance Captures a Year of Tumult in American History

Open Dance Project's '1968: The Whole World is Watching' (photos by Matthew Hollis)

AUGUST 19, 1968. CHICAGO. The Democratic National Convention is underway. Inside the International Amphitheatre, and on the streets outside the Conrad Hilton hotel, all hell is about the break loose. The events leading up to a four-day-long confrontation between thousands of young protestors and thousands of equally young police officers, national guardsmen, regular army troops, and city workers is the subject of Open Dance Project’s new dance theater performance 1968: The Whole World is Watching, conceived and directed by ODP artistic director Annie Arnoult.


During a time in which our country feels more divided than ever, it’s instructive, cathartic and, yes, entertaining to see those events translated into an audience-immersive experience by Arnoult’s company of veteran and relatively new dancers, some as young as 24.

Brenden Winkfield, 32, a seasoned and award-winning tap dancer who has performed with Open Dance Project for two years, finds Arnoult’s dedication to eliminating the boundaries between the audience and the stage inspiring, but challenging. “Not only am I dancing, I’m speaking, and I’m singing,” says Winkfield. “I’m doing all of these vulnerable things, and people are literally just a few feet, sometimes inches away from what I’m doing.”

What Winkfield and nine other dancers are doing, as the audience moves freely among them, is yelling (the show’s title is the chant protestors shouted outside of the Democratic National Convention), whispering, and singing while evoking some of the era’s most indelible images and personalities with complex movement and theatrical gestures. At one point, Winkfield takes on the role of boxer Sonny Liston in his first match with a then loquacious upstart named Cassius Clay (who would soon change his name to Muhammad Ali). “Annie felt like the powder keg that 1968 became started in 1964 with this fight,” says Winkfield. In another tableau, the dancers stand ten-hut like ghosts on a battlefield, awaiting orders to march into oblivion. At other key moments, they lie on the floor in the fetal position or with their hands behind their backs as if handcuffed, ready to be dragged into a police van.

Given the intensity of the history that Arnoult is asking her dancers to imagine and embody during rehearsals, Winkfield acknowledges that emotions run high for everyone involved. “We have to learn, in immersive theater, to check that at the door,” says Winkfield. “And that’s really hard sometimes. Especially when you’re throwing punches at each other or throwing someone to the ground.”

And then there’s a moment where the ensemble rushes together toward an imaginary podium and suddenly freezes as the voice of Bobby Kennedy, Jr. is heard to say, “I have some very sad news for you … ” before telling his audience Martin Luther King, Jr. has just been assassinated. As Kennedy’s famous speech continues — an impromptu call for peace he delivered just two months before being assassinated himself — the dancers rewind their movements, slowly moving backward as an ensemble, like a flock of angels being pulled against their will into an uncertain future.

Speaking of time, if you’re going to evoke the ’60s, you’ve got to have great music. Thankfully, Arnoult avoids turning 1968 into a jukebox musical by including a handful of original rock songs composed and performed by Paul Beebe, whose music and lyrics evoke the spirit of that time without sounding like a pastiche. Beebe’s music works especially well in a section where the dancers just cut loose and joyfully get their groove on, like a corps of flower children high on the potential for peace and love.

“This is a form of entertainment,” says Winkfield of Open Dance Project’s look back at one of the most tumultuous years in our country’s history. “But it’s entertainment that’s saying something.”

1968: The Whole World is Watching runs May 12-20 at MATCH.

Art + Entertainment
Consistent Focus on the Patient Is What Sets Montrose Med Spa Apart

Owner Maricela Olivo and Montrose Med Spa

WHAT MAKES MONTROSE Med Spa stand apart from the competition? We set ourselves apart from the competition by being consistently focused on one thing: the patient. With that focus, we will succeed in a successful and healthy experience and loyalty to Montrose Med Spa. Staying true to our message of intentional wellness is a point of difference where I see other spas being unclear and distracted in their direction. By listening to our patients, we ensure we meet and exceed their expectations. We continually stay on top of the market by offering the best innovative body sculpting and skin treatments that invigorate and energize and are specifically designed to restore balance and strength and renew youth to the body. We also utilize a number of marketing programs to stay on the minds of our guests, including radio, TV, direct mail, email blasts, and unique invitations for exclusive treatments. One element that helps to establish the bar and sets us apart from our competition is our emphasis on providing a complete medical gym experience—from the varied treatments with Emsculpt Neo to a personalized health and wellness and skin evaluation for each individual by our certified staff. We also provide a noninvasive, pain-free, and needle-free facelift through EMFace in addition to offering monthly beauty memberships that create a commitment to the overall wellbeing of the patient.

Keep Reading Show less

ARTIST AND ARTS activist Sarah Sudhoff created her vibrant and playful piece The Reading Brain as a response to a San Antonio museum exhibit about dyslexia. She was inspired also by her son, who has dyslexia, loves sculptures, and whose favorite color is red.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment

Lisa Foronda, Greg Harper

SINCE ITS FOUNDING by the late catering king and philanthropist Jackson Hicks, Legacy Community Health’s Schmooze has been a holiday bash that hundreds look forward to each year.

Keep Reading Show less
Parties