
DANCER
MATRIX:
What is your background;
what brought you here?
MICHAEL: I
spent a number of years in New York as a dancer, I danced with the Merce Cunningham
Dance Company for a while, then moved out to San Francisco to
study computer animation. I got a call from Charlie Moultan, who is the Choreographer
on this show, and it just so happens that Charlie also used to dance with Merce
Cunningham many years back, and had heard I was in town. He thought that if I
had danced for Merce, then I could handle the work here, so he invited me to
audition, and I was very fortunate to be picked as one of the 10 Principal Dancers.
MATRIX: Describe
some of the movements you find you’re being asked to do.
MICHAEL: The
dancing is very club oriented - it’s kind of a mixture of
that with a lot of modern dance technique too - it’s a blend. The dancers
we’re working with are some of the best dancers in San Francisco; a lot
of them belong to ODC [Oberlin Dance Collective of California]. There’s
a dancer here who dances with Alonzo King’s Lines Ballet; they’re
all top notch dancers. I think what Charlie was interested in was a group of
dancers who had a lot of technique to start off with, but who could also mix
it up and get funky and have a really good time, and show off their technique,
but not get really uptight.
MATRIX: Have
you seen the set you’ll be working on?
MICHAEL: Yes,
I have. It’s incredible, massive - once we get all the people
in there, it’s really going to be a trip. Today’s rehearsal was the
first day we had the group of one hundred dancers with us ten, and I guess I
would characterize it as controlled mayhem. There’s all this stuff going
on, but if you really look at it, it’s tightly choreographed. I mean, there
are definite sections of things you can really point out and say, “These
guys really know what they’re doing”, and yet it’s a great
big mishmash at the same time. It’s really cool and visually beautiful,
I think.
MATRIX: How long have the 10 Principal Dancers been working together?
MICHAEL: We
started working together on Tuesday [June 12th, 2001], so three days total with
just the ten of us, and then today is the first day with the group
of one hundred. I think we were all really fortunate to have that time to develop
and generate new material together. The ODC people were lucky because they had
already worked together, but I’ve made a lot of new friends, we all laugh
a lot; it has been really great.
MATRIX: Now that there are more of you, how are the rehearsals structured?
MICHAEL: Basically,
Charlie has put the ten of us in pairs, and each pair gets a group of twenty.
Each pair has to teach that group of twenty material, we show
it to Charlie, then all the groups come in. Each group has a different name like
the ‘shakers’, the ‘crackers’, and Charlie groups them
in the space, doing whatever it is we’ve taught them; he presses ‘play’ on
the music and we just dance.
MATRIX: Has there been any talk about what you are going to do when the nine
hundred extras arrive?
MICHAEL: It
remains to be seen. For today Charlie is focused on getting that group of one
hundred really solid with what they’re doing. At this point,
since we’ve been working so closely with him for the past week, I think
he’s going to trust us a little bit more in front of the camera - I think
we’ll be a little bit more featured, but of course it all remains to be
seen. I’m anxious to see what the finished product is like too, in the
context of the film.
MATRIX: Tell
us about your costume…
MICHAEL: Well… there’s not much there for one thing! I personally
will be wearing a pair of very shimmery, transparent pants that are cut very,
very low, and that’s it. Some of the women are wearing tube tops that are
also very transparent and shimmery. I think we’ll have a sort of shimmery
glitter makeup on our bodies as well, and some of us will get those Matrix plugs
in our skin. I think they’re anticipating it’s going to be about
one to two hours for makeup and hair for each of us, and that’s nine hundred
people … it’s going to be pretty intense.
MATRIX: Have you done film work before?
MICHAEL: Very, very little. With the company I danced with we made several films,
but nothing like this.
MATRIX: What is your anticipation of sitting for two hours having makeup put
on?
MICHAEL: Well,
I have a book… I have several. Then you have to get up every
once in a while and re-warm yourself up, it’s just part of the process
so you don’t hurt yourself. If you kick your leg too high and you’re
not warm, you could rip a hamstring and that would be it, and the rest of the
filming just wouldn’t be that much fun.
MATRIX: What did you think of the first film?
MICHAEL: It
was amazing. I don’t want to gush, but I thought, “Wow!
This is completely changing the way we think about films.” And certainly,
as a dancer - all the movement, all the flying sequences - I don’t think
anybody had ever seen anything like that before, so I thought about the possibilities
for dance. With all of that, it seems to be upping the ante on what is possible,
so having seen THE MATRIX, then Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, I can’t
wait to see what they do with this film; I’m really excited.
MATRIX: Thanks
Michael.
Interview by REDPILL
June 2001
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