A Dance Performance Choreographed In Your Own Home

A Series Of Performances That Take You Throughout Philadelphia
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How would you feel about performing a choreographed dance piece, in your home, with your family, in front of an audience? The Philadelphia-based Headlong Dance Theater is doing exactly that with their new project “This Town is a Mystery.”

Throughout four different neighborhoods in Philadelphia, four families have opened their doors to audiences, to showcase their choreographed piece while including stories of their neighborhood, their household, and their personal lives. It’s a deeply personal, intimate, and engaging series of performances.

The idea first came to Andrew Simonet, co-director of Headlong Dance Theater and lead director for “This Town Is A Mystery,” as he was driving around Philly. “I began wondering, who lives here? Who is in all these little houses? What happens on this block?” The project only grew from there. The project is bluntly summed up on the website, “Why?” “Because every household is a universe/Because breaking bread with someone annihilates stereotypes/Because being the show is better than watching the show".

“This Town Is A Mystery,” reaches beyond the "cultural suburb" that Simonet sees so many cultural institutions falling into. It is an inclusive event, not one that traffics in exclusivity. All audience members are randomly assigned to two of the four homes, There are the Bosticks from the Tacony area of Philadelphia, The Aryadareis and their three children, Tobie Hoffman who lives alone, and the McQueens. Each performance lasts approximately 30-40 minutes long and then there is a community potluck that everyone engages in.

This creative project challenges it's participants to re-think the nature of what we call performance, to question the confines of what we call community, and to reflect upon the boundaries of 'home' as a private or public space. The project invites us to meet our neighbors, to start a physical conversation, and to remember that dance and theater have the power to create the most intimate experiences possible.

"This Town is a Mystery" runs as part of the 2012 Philadelphia Live Arts Festival from September 7 through September 22. Find more information here.

"This Town Is A Mystery" Photographs
(01 of13)
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L-R: Adam Bostick, Princess Bostick, Lea BostickIn front of their home in the Tacony neighborhood of Philadelphia. (credit:Andrew Simonet )
(02 of13)
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L-R: Princess Bostick and Preston Bostick (the miracle baby who is finally home after 7 moths in the NICU). (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(03 of13)
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L-R: Andrew Simonet, Adam Bostick, David Brick, Lea Bostick, Princess Bostick (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(04 of13)
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L-R: Princess Bostick, Adam Bostick (performing the final section) (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(05 of13)
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L-R: Kenya McQueen, Calvin McQueen, Kassean McQueen, Kendra McQueen (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(06 of13)
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L-R: Princess Bostick, Adam Bostick, rehearsing in the studio (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(07 of13)
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L-R: Kendra McQueen, Kassean McQueen, Kenya McQueen (rehearsing in studio) (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(08 of13)
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L-R: Calvin McQueen, Kassean McQueen, Kendra McQueen, Kenya McQueen rehearsing in their home. (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(09 of13)
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clockwise from left: Sulaimon Aryadarei, Zahed Aryadarei, Shannon Aryadarei, Shaheen Aryadarei, Sydney Aryadarie in their home (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(10 of13)
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Sydney Aryadarei in front of her South Philadelphia home (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(11 of13)
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Zahed Aryadarei (getting ready for rehearsal) (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(12 of13)
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Tobie Hoffman (credit:Andrew Simonet)
(13 of13)
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Tobie Hoffman rehearsing in her home (credit:Andrew Simonet )

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