IMPRESSIONS: Stacy Grossfield's "metamorphosis 2" at The Chocolate Factory Theater
Stacy Grossfield presents metamorphosis 2
Dates: March 20 - 30, 2024
Venue: The Chocolate Factory Theater
Choreographer: Stacy Grossfield
Performers and collaborators: Alexandra Albrecht, Tuva H. and Nola Sporn Smith with Hannah Franzen, Nishka Pierson and Dianna Warren
Lighting designer: Madeline Best
Sound designer: Ryan Gamblin
Video designer: Gil Sperling
Special effects: J & M Special Effects
Special effects and prop master: Hilary Brown-Istrefi
Ballet costumer: Benefis
When the excellent Nola Sporn Smith takes microphone in hand, she looks slyly at the audience, and speaks the words of Candace Owens, the Black and beautiful spokeswoman for the far-right. “I go for the jugular — a lot,” she says. In metamorphosis 2, choreographer Stacy Grossfield also grasps the viewer by the throat, and for 60 absorbing minutes at the cavernous The Chocolate Factory Theater she doesn’t let go.
Addressing issues that affect the lives of contemporary women, Grossfield examines the far-right, wellness culture, millennials, boomers, feminism, Blackness, whiteness, birthing, and motherhood. Grossfield interrogates each topic with equilibrium. The inauthentic rhetoric of the first half of the program contrasts with ‘the real’ experience of childbirth in the second, positing ideas open to interpretation .
Dressed in a pert, pink workout outfit, Smith adopts the persona of the "tradwife", a construct of antifeminist and primarily white Christian conservatives that glorifies the stay-at-home mom. Tradwives, seen on social media, appear flawless. So, too, is the fit and unflappable Smith/Owens character who states, “white lives matter”. Married to the son of a British Lord, Owens has reached the pinnacle of tradwife-dom.
“I speak out against feminism because it’s not feminism (but) a cultural war on men.” Smith says this line and others excerpted from Owens’ Liberty University Convocation speech in 2018. The fanatical speech espouses conspiracy theories, whose absurdity Grossfield mines. With comedic timing, Smith punctuates her speech with a flip of her hair-extension ponytail (a style popularized in a viral TikTok post), a drop to the floor in a V, and jumps with legs spread wide.
Soldiering on, Smith performs an aerobic ballet solo to classical music. The ballerina, an idealized woman, is traditionally cosseted, corseted, and white. Three ballerinas appear costumed in dirndls, a nod to National Socialism implying that Owens’ conservative supporters are white supremacists. Suggesting a lineage of romanticized white motherhood, the dancers range from child ballerina to working ballerina to veteran ballerina. Dancing to Gounod’s Faust they intertwine arms and circle. Faust made a pact with the devil, as has Owens, suggests Grossfield.
In a non sequitur, Alexandra Albrecht, costumed as a gray-wigged boomer, attaches herself to Smith’s millennial back. Smith, sobbing in frustration, tries forcibly to remove her by vigorously somersaulting and whipping her around, but to no avail. Meanwhile, in a distant corner, a naked, full-bodied Tuva H. settles cross-legged and stares into a large, convex mirror. Unhurriedly, she applies makeup, and placidly plays with her long, dirty-blonde extensions. A hint of things to come, Tuva H. vomits, flings blood onto the mirror, and slumps into a fetal position.
The audience is shepherded briefly into a cold, nearly pitch-black room where a 3-foot-square robot-like hologram box advances toward the standing crowd. A hologram fan (a new technology) projects Owens’ talking face on the hologram's four sides. In the dim light, we notice the barely visible Smith seated in a lotus position with eyes closed. Perhaps, Smith is meditating on this turbulent and confused world, or is attempting to block what we’ve just experienced.
The lengthy, second-half finale conveys the brutality of labor and birth. Grossfield, mother of two, says that giving birth is the deepest, most authentic experience of a woman’s life. The nearly naked Albrecht, in labor with her back to us, audibly moans. For relief, she hangs from a ballet barre and sips from her bottle of Gerolsteiner mineral water. Tuva H. is also in labor, and her water breaks forming a milky puddle. Blood is smeared across her face and body. Holding a carving knife, she groans, screams and becomes increasingly feral. In her distress she crawls up a brick wall and hangs upside down. The ballerinas return and sink to the floor deflated, smiles plastered on their faces. Eventually, the stage quiets. Smith silently mouths incomprehensible, final words into her microphone leaving us in suspense. metamorphosis 2 packs a wallop of a punch, and for this go round, has said a lot.