Press

“This marvelous space dedicated to dance and performance in Long Island City, Queens, has just purchased a permanent facility in the neighborhood, but for the time being its forward-thinking presentation will continue at its current home.” —Gia Kourlas, New York Times

Press & Reviews

I have admittedly never been to the Chocolate Factory in my ten years in New York City. Still, I can see this might not be a typical setup. Ayano has the chairs placed so they span the right side of the raised platform stage and onto the concrete floor in three rows including pillows on the ground. When we came in to find our seats, we saw that Amelia was already in the show.
Steven Wendt and Wes Day’s Plato Caves: Screens vs Shadows was, on the sunny Sunday afternoon performance I attended, a massive delight for a rapt audience of children. The event is The Chocolate Factory Theater’s first venture into theatre for young audiences (TYA), and unlike other TYA shows I’ve attended (including in my own childhood), this one gave the adults in the room something real to think about: our dependence on screens.
In Ayano Elson’s Control, a minimal exterior scaffolds a sensuous core. The four dancers (Cayleen Del Rosario, Amelia Heintzelman, Owen Prum, and evan ray suzuki) cycle through repeated movements that are simple, often minute, and restrained. We, the audience, can feel a psychic intensity in each sequence—an impulse, ticking beneath the dancing body’s surface, that intuits and responds to its co-presence with performance space and performing peers.
In “Nothing: more,” Autumn Knight and her collaborators and co-choreographers Kayla Farrish, Dominica Greene, and Jasmine Hearn let their imaginations roam in an interactive set that evokes an empty, after-hours gallery.