William Forsythe: A Quiet Evening of Dance at The Shed

Rauf ‘RubberLegz’ Yasit (left), Parvaneh Scharafali (right). A Quiet Evening of Dance. Photo: Mohamed Sadek. Courtesy The Shed

  Walking to The Shed, NYC's newest cultural center on West 30th Street and 11th Avenue, is a visual lesson in urban planning.  After exiting the A train on 34th Street at the eyesore that is Penn Station and crossing Eighth Avenue, signage indicates that there will be the new Moynihan Station.  (Among the many reasons to see Ed Norton's Motherless Brooklyn when it opens next month is the recreation of the original Penn Station.)   Heading towards 11th Ave. and the Hudson River are more glassy complexes way closer to completion than the long-delayed station.  There's also Neiman Marcus.  The Shed's physical address, 545 30th Street, is

DRAGON SPRING PHOENIX RISE at The Shed is a 21st Century Kung Fu Spectacle

Swords whizzed past heads close enough to cut their opponents’ hair; dancers dropped from or rose to the sky like celestial beings dangling on a mere thread; acrobatic action scenes shifted into nightclub extravaganzas complete with vogueing routines; fire and water danced alongside the performers as elemental partners, adding to the danger and thrills. A dream team of talents was assembled to realize co-conceiver and director Chen Shi-Zheng’s vision that was initially inspired by observing Bruce Lee’s audition tape for his film debut at age 18. All of this and more came together to create Kung Fu spectacle Dragon Spring

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