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Where's the Avant-Garde?: BAM Tests Audience Endurance


Article # : 15589 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 2 / 1989  2,210 Words
Author : Peter Lawrence
Peter Lawrence writes for a number of national publications and is based in New York City.

       As its name implies, the Brooklyn Academy of Music's (BAM) Next Wave Festival, which opened in October 1988 and continued almost to the end of the year, was intended as a harbinger of things to come in the arts. "Next Wave" was a way of denoting that the performances were avant-garde, innovative, the way ahead. They included a spectacle titled The Warrior Ant from the creators of The Gospel at Colonus; a piece by Argentina's Teatro del Sur called, promisingly, Tango Varsaviano and The Power Project, a performance piece by clown Bob Berky.
       
        Of the three pieces, Berky's work was by far the least publicized and proved the most accomplished. While the other two pieces were hardly successful (one might even consider them debacles), they were instructive in that they demonstrated what currently masquerades as the avant-garde.
       
        Seeing all three in the context of the much talked-about Lincoln Center production of Beckett's Waiting for Godot starring Steve Martin and Robin Williams was extraordinarily ironic. Though the Mike Nichols production of Beckett had, God knows, its own hornet's nest of problems, it did point up the fact that Backett's seminal play, first performed in 1953, was far and away more sophisticated, "modern," and, thirty-five years later, more avant-garde than anything being witnessed anywhere at BAM.
       
        A New Godot?
       
        Nobody expected, of course, a new Godot to emerge from the Next Wave Festival; and comparisons, though odious, remain valuable. Nor is it without interest that, in this day and age particularly, with its mania for ... (1993 of 12667 Characters)
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