upper waypoint

A Ballet About Homelessness Wants You to See People, Not Look Away

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Can a ballet make an audience more empathetic? San Francisco-based choreographer Marika Brussel hopes her new piece, From Shadows, will do just that.

Brussel’s ballet tells the story of a family ripped apart by addiction — and of a young girl searching for her father in the faces of those who live on the streets. For Brussel the dance carries both local significance — she regularly passes homeless encampments on her way to and from the ODC dance studios — and personal weight. She, too, loved someone who lost several years of their life to homelessness.

“It’s much easier just to close down, and to not look at other people’s pain,” Brussel says. “I don’t want to not have those feelings, so I made this dance.”

Watch dancers transform the pain of invisibility and neglect into a beautiful dance in From Shadows. — Text by Sarah Hotchkiss

 

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint
The Bay Area’s Great American Diner Is a 24-Hour Filipino Casino RestaurantHow a Dumpling Chef Brought Dim Sum to Bay Area Farmers MarketsNetflix’s ‘Baby Reindeer’: A Dark, Haunting Story Bungles its Depiction of Queerness5 New Mysteries and Thrillers for Your Nightstand This SpringSFMOMA Workers Urge the Museum to Support Palestinians in an Open LetterThe Stud, SF's Oldest Queer Bar, Gears Up for a Grand ReopeningEast Bay Street Photographers Want You to Take ‘Notice’A New Bay Area Food Festival Celebrates Chefs of Color and Diasporic UnityOn Weinstein, Cosby, OJ Simpson and America’s Systemic Misogyny Problemnic feliciano Is Blessed With The ‘Curse of an Overactive Creative Mind’