Abstract

In the spring of 2006, Great Small Works was commissioned by theLower Manhattan Cultural Council to make an art parade to kick off the River to River Festival, a summer-long series of concerts and performances whose goal, it seems to me, was to bring back a sense of lively public culture to the still-traumatized environs of 2001’s “Ground Zero.” While previous years’ parades had been collections of New York City artists’ processional sculptures, we decided to make our River to River parade a street theater event, a politically themed meditation on rivers, streets, and the dynamics of power in communities faced with transformation and change. In this, of course, we were following the kinds of traditions which Bread and Puppet Theater, Welfare State International, and other groups in the seventies had pursued; as well as the rich processional traditions of the 1920s and 30s; centuries of outrageous carnival street performance, Renaissance outdoor spectacle; and even the origins of Greek tragedy in the wheel-mounted processional boats – the carre navalis – which some have considered the roots of European carnival.

Highlights

  • Great Small Works has been creating themed parades on political topics for a number of years, and our method has been to bring together different artists who create images as well as music and texts, to be performed in theater events which reflect our sense of the salient aspects of our moment and place

  • This time, meditating on the theme of rivers, and considering the particular spirit of the American moment in which we find ourselves, we decided to think of three rivers

  • We paraded to six different locales in Lower Manhattan on a sunny Thursday during lunch hour, and in each spot the water cut-outs defined a performing area in which we staged a short scene based upon the storytelling possibilities of each float

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Summary

Introduction

Great Small Works (a theater collective founded by Trudi Cohen, Jenny Romaine, Mark Sussman, Stephen Kaplin, Roberto Rossi and myself) has been creating themed parades on political topics for a number of years, and our method has been to bring together different artists who create images (costumes, banners, processional figures, paintings, and puppets) as well as music and texts, to be performed in theater events which reflect our sense of the salient aspects of our moment and place. We paraded to six different locales in Lower Manhattan on a sunny Thursday during lunch hour, and in each spot the water cut-outs defined a performing area in which we staged a short scene based upon the storytelling possibilities of each float.

Results
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