Miguel Gutierrez calls his company of dancers the Powerful People, and powerful they feel in Everyone, the dance-kissed piece of abstract theater opening Out There 20. At turns, the characters are also giddy people, awkward people, fascinated people, unsettled people, unbridled people, distracted people, determined people, naïve people, idealistic people, vulnerable people, frustrated people, impressionable people, lustful people and, through it all, hopeful people. Such is life as an American twentysomething, an age Gutierrez explores with layers of minimalist music and movement, fragmented text and crescendos of intensity.
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He also challenges his audiences. With Everyone, Gutierrez fosters a relationship that, at times, seems more zoo/visitor than performer/viewer. His players are learning how to exist in the world - we see fear, playfulness, over-the-top sexuality, and the aping of one another in the compulsion to feel normal - and they're as aware of our presence as we are of them. Moments after what could be the most extended group makeout scene in the history of theater, the players break into an atonal, Lennon-esque chorus - "When you rise up, you must sing songs" - extending their longing for community to all of us. In the end, Everyone is for anyone who wants to share or reclaim his own coming of age.