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Hanson's first training was as a writer, and she describes the making of We Never Like Talking as "writing a play," but it's a work with many collaborators. In addition to her interview subjects, she asked musicians Dave Proscia and Maggie Brown for a score and invited visual designer Etta Lillenthal to organize a stage environment that includes space for technology as well as for human movement.
Alongside these living contributors, Hanson is drawing on another of her interests, the work of the late director John Cassavetes, incorporating dialogue and situations from his films into her script. "He loved humanity so much and he brought it to the screen. His love for people exceeded concerns for craft." Hanson shares Cassavetes' preference for emotional truth over technical clarity: "I don't need flawlessness or perfection. [He] was willing to be a fool—to go to a place of embarrassment to get to great truth."
In rehearsal, the movement reveals Hanson's quixotic signature style. Impulses jump from place to place in the body, rather than spinning out in long, flowy sequences. The complexity is in the relationships between body parts, which move in a fairly restricted space instead of charging across the stage. Highly gestural, looking almost like a personal version of sign language, the rhythmic structure is unusual, with accents shifting away from the standard downbeat. Seen with the music, they create a kind of postmodern counterpoint.
Later in the rehearsal, Hanson's father, Vern, arrives. He's appeared on video in Hanson's previous work, and she's pleased that he's able to perform live with her in this project. A skilled t'ai chi practitioner, he starts moving through a form. He is joined by Ezra Dickinson, one of the other dancers, who seems to be following along: his focus is clearly on Vern, his timing lags just a bit behind. It's a gentle reminder of standard dance practice, in which students learn by imitating their teachers, and a lovely example of one generation passing knowledge on to the rest of us.