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TAKOMA PARK, MARYLAND • SILVER SPRING, MARYLAND

Features: Arts & Entertainment


Local women put on "Weerd" show

Weerd Sisters , Diana Tokaji of Silver Spring, and Josephine Nicholson of D.C., entertained audiences at the first ever Capital Fringe Festival in July.   Their gutsy dance-stories were, as one audience member expressed: "clever, funny, and so real," ranging in style "from vaudevillian, to quiet and powerful."

These choreographers often use words--poetry, song, or conversational text - to enhance their works.   When dance is layered with music and   spoken word, the textures of a piece grow richer, according to these women, both writers.  

Sign Language Dramatist, Marcia Freeman, added another language layer through the facial expression and gestural   communication of sign.   And not just stuck in one corner--Freeman moved past the usual interpreter boundary, onto the stage, one time dancing a solo as a turtle, another time in signed conversation with a dancer eating breakfast cereal.

Lisa Buchsbaum, violinist and vocalist of Silver Spring, added her haunting tones to the performances, and Elijah Balbed, 16-year-old Silver Spring student at Einstein High School, brought his mellow, full-bodied saxophone to the stage.   Both musicians composed original music for the Weerd Sisters production.   Patricia Dubroof, visual artist in Montgomery County, enlivened the theatrical staging with her paintings of "the sea" and "the perfect woman;"   movement specialist Jeanne Feeney of Takoma Park danced and led improvisation for one of the pieces, and Silver Spring's Catherine Eliot designed the lights.

Nicholson and Tokaji say their goal is to create work that reflects life with all its beauty, twist, and ridiculousness.   Nicholson, described as a "relaxed and whimsical" performer, and Tokaji as "funny and intense," were born within a week of each other (both are 52), and are unusually long-limbed, a visual likeness that makes them look, for all their  differences,   like odd sisters.  

Said another audience member, leaving the theater laughing with her children and husband, "they have a unique way of making dancing so personal but universal, and also accessible to everyone, even those who aren't dance people.   There really should be a new word for what they do."

To find out more about the Weerd sisters, visit www.dianatokaji.com/fringe_festival.htm.


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