Weight/Wait – Swindon Dance

Created by Caldonia Walton & Kathy Richardson

Filmed by Barney White/Quiet Eye Film

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Decades. Centuries. A Millennia of scholars, scientific endeavour, and academic study – and still, the exploration of mental, emotional, and physical ‘weight’ we carry within our thoughts, a bellowing internal spectral voice on our bodily autonomy is still something we cannot fully fathom.

An original story created by Caldonia Walton & Kathy Richardson from personal experiences and research with young people in youth groups and hospitals – Alex Weight/Wait is an interactive digital piece of movement, principally designed for early to late teenagers. To explore and understand elements of mental health and exercises to better comprehend and potentially control their anxieties, stresses, and inner voices.

Weight/Wait is more than cinematic choreography, opening conservation on mental health, utilising raw and accessible forms of communication for all – dance. And though we may hear the stories of three individuals trialling their own practises to grapple with their anxieties and exertions – Alex’s reformation and venture into counselling is the central focus. Overwhelmed, drowning, and keeping their head barely above the precipice, Alex’s inner voice is undoubtedly an integral component, evident by the intimacy of Walton & Richardson in movement, to an extent that solo performances ad detachments come over as uneasy.

Caldonia & Richardson’s choreography precisely offers the combination of movement, control and breathing one would expect, in this case expanding beyond and into the performance elements of theatre. The uniqueness and respect for the body’s limitless possibilities prove themselves invaluable as the pair contort and channel their form into storytelling elements, telling the story of the immense weight behind Alex’s thoughts and anxieties – expressing the distress, tensity and even comedy of the story through movement and quieter moments of reflective breathing.

Not all quiet, Alex Paton’s music composition compliments the elements well – from the more intimate moments to the lighters sequences as Richardson, Sanea Singh and Chris Radford, all immerse themselves in their initial counselling sessions. Initially unfamiliar, even doubtful of the process, the eventual reliance, even crutch of the session becomes too much for Alex when ‘time’s up’, a less often aspect of those undertaking counselling and the struggles they undertake to find someone to communicate with often enough.

A black dog, a rain cloud, a creature in the corner, a friend. Yes, a friend. Sometimes the exploration of our mental state can find that the very thing we’ve been fighting is a part of us – a weighted part, and though it may appear familiar and comforting, it isn’t always healthy. Gracefully tactful, the empathetic writing forms the foundations with which the choreography can stir upon emotion, lifting the poetic words of Walton, Richardson and poetry writer Ryan Dre Sinclair from the ashes and into something tangible.

Minimal, the interactive portions of the video could broaden themselves. Breathing and written exercises possess merit, the submissions of other viewers a touch for audiences to measure their responses against and find kindred ideas, and additional tips on how those out with their experiences handle personal anxieties. The film’s editing enables a more intimate nature, Barney White/Quiet Eye Film capturing an intensity throughout the piece through dynamic angles, slowed frames enabling audiences to spectate movement in ways rarely demonstrated – if anything, as perfectly compact as the narrative is, with a hanging ending, there’s a desire for more of the pairs work – a sure-fire sign of dependable and engaging production.

Catharsis is a rare insight. Often, intensity and raw emotion channel a discomfort for audiences, something appreciated but perhaps uneasy to digest. Weight/Wait takes a substantially different stance: Its flow and storytelling craft something fulfilling as a stand-alone narrative piece, but its brief interactivity and intensity of movement channels a profoundly personal understanding of its jumping point.

Weight/Wait is available to watch online from March 3rd – March 31st at 10pm

Advertisement

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s