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The leisurely approach to inducing total boredom
Susan Darlington reviews Recreation by Yorkshire Dance, Leeds

THERE’S a growing interest in “slow television” which can be traced back to Andy Warhol’s 1963 conceptual film Sleep and, as an adjunct to this, Gillie Kleiman is seemingly exploring slow choreography with Recreation.

The one-hour show, an invitation to consider work and relaxation and to “blur the distinction between being active and being receptive,” sets out to achieve the latter by making the audience performers and vice versa by introducing two invited dancers onstage to join the core cast of three.

As a concept, it has tantalising potential but this experimental production fails to realise it on almost every level.

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