Written by 4:33 pm Arts • 5 Comments

FUSION: A Review

Formerly known as IntoxicASIAN (and Diwali the year before that), Fusion: The Pan-Asian Experience, is a night full of Asian culture, dance and overall experience organized by CCASA (Connecticut College Asian/Asian American Student Association). Since I am far from an expert on Asian culture, I can’t say I really expected anything specific when I went to see the event this past Friday.

Every year, the event raises money for charities in Asia. This year’s show started with a slideshow featuring photos of broken-down classrooms in Vietnam, which will be fixed by Conn students January of 2010. While it is a noble cause, starting the show off this way was kind of a downer for me.

I know that sounds horrible, and I know many places in the world need resources for rebuilding different public buildings and infrastructure, but maybe it was because I entered Cro that night just expecting a dance performance.

Finally the performances started.

“Jai-Ho,” the first song (from Slumdog Millionaire), didn’t impress me. The choreography was entertaining and everyone looked like they were having fun onstage. They weren’t as synchronized as they probably should’ve been, though.

The dancers also were wearing scarves and I hoped that the choreographers would integrate that accessory into the dance somehow but it was just for aesthetic appeal, which disappointed me a little. While that possibly would’ve made the dance a little complicated to teach, it would’ve been more interesting as a result.

The Vietnamese Fan Dance was very well performed. Each dancer was very careful to keep the fans shaking at all times. The only “fan dance” I had ever seen, before last night, was from an episode of Gilmore Girls when Rory attends her débutante ball, so I was quite impressed with Fusion’s version.

The dancers were almost 100 percent synchronized, which surprised me. The fan props could’ve been disastrous. The part when the dancers were going around in a circle, elevating the fans as they went around, is just like the dancers going around Chicago’s Billy Flynn in “All I Care About,” giving the piece a theatrical flair.

One of my favorite dances could have been the Chinese Water-sleeve Dance. There was such beautiful choreography in there. It wasn’t completely synchronized, which killed it for me.

Granted, the dancers had to remember their safety because of the extremely long sleeves on the costumes. Apart from that, I loved it, especially Wayne Ong’s role in the storyline.

I wasn’t all that impressed with the Korean Dance. The dancing and choreography was pretty good, but nothing really compelled me to watch it.

While I give the ladies props for dancing in high-heeled shoes, there were a few girls who looked like they didn’t even want to be up on stage. That just doesn’t make for an entertaining experience. A performer needs to draw the audience in with their smiles and enthusiasm, or at least fake it.

Then came the belly dancing. A lot of the dancers had never done it before and belly dancing is pretty difficult, so kudos to them for getting the choreography together and well synchronized. I enjoyed Pete Konowski’s humorous addition to the piece; though, I think I would’ve loved it more if he had started dancing with them instead of just being mesmerized by them. That would probably go against the purpose of the dance, which is supposed to seduce a man (seemed to work pretty well on Pete).

I enjoyed the Beijing Opera as well as its introduction by Charles Cochran and Devon Butler, the MCs. The star of the piece, Aaron Chau, was dressed as a Chinese mime and mimed quite well. Offended that he’d been left out of the party, Aaron proceeded to mime-drink all the royal’s wine and drunk-walked, stumbling off stage temporarily while he stole the rest of their property.

When he came back, he was still captivating, doing cool martial arts tricks with a long silver pole. Spinning it at high speeds, he dropped the pole a few times, but it was still entertaining.

I adored the Chinese Yo-Yo piece. Jeremy Wong was jumping rope and catching it, wrapping it around his leg and spinning it, juggling two of them on the string simultaneously. The performance was phenomenal.

For the Martial Arts demonstration, I was enthralled. While Charles van Rees didn’t teach anyone how to complete the defensive maneuvers, I know one thing: if I’m ever in a fight, I’m tagging Charles in my place to kick my opponent’s ass. Poor Sam Field, as the uke taijitsu (empty-hand), getting thrown into the floor almost the whole time. Ouch.

The Lion Dance was cute and very entertaining. I think the look for the two guys as the lion would’ve been enhanced had they worn similar colored shirts, since the lion’s body showed their torsos under it some of the time. I definitely laughed when the lion kept fluttering his eyes at the audience.

The Supra Tofu Bros. V.2 was very well done. Dan Swezey and Wayne Ong were enjoying themselves, they were extremely synchronized and the audience enjoyed it thoroughly.  Since they did a similar piece in Eclipse last spring, the dance came with little surprise value, but it was excellently performed.

Bollywood had good dancing. I thought the girl in the white shirt, presumably the one who choreographed it, should’ve worn one of the two colors her dancers were wearing so that she didn’t stand out as much. It was very similar to the belly-dancing piece but there were slight differences. Overall I enjoyed it.

Bhangra Fusion might’ve been my favorite dance. It was hilarious! I enjoyed the dance-off aspect of it. The perfromance was mostly synchronized, and everyone was having fun onstage. The audience loved it too. It had a great ending as well, where the guys jumped into each other’s arms.

As a performer, I know things can slip up, get messy, etc. and it’s the way the dancers deal with mistakes. No one can anticipate getting off by a half of a beat, or further off. All one can do is know the steps, practice together and hope it’s perfect on stage.

I admire the hard work everyone put into this show. In all, it was a thoroughly enjoyable event.

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