Like dancers, stage technicians have a touch of masochism in their culture. Both groups work long hours with erratic schedules. Both are associated with physical dangers — picture the stagehand standing on a ladder with his power tool, the dancer pushing herself to the physical limits of strength and endurance.
"They're both working their bodies toward the same artistic ends, from the opposite ends of the approach," observed Minneapolis choreographer Karen Sherman.
For more than 20 years, Sherman has been one of the few dancers to experience the dark, often lonely experience of working backstage. On the one hand, she is an award-winning dancer and choreographer whose work appears on stages nationwide. On the other, she maintains a side gig that has her hanging lights, flying scenery and doing mic checks. As a freelance stagehand for the Walker Art Center, Sherman performs a host of tasks that are rarely seen by audiences.
"These are two different cultures I belong to, two different languages I speak," she said.
And now the Walker has commissioned Sherman to create a show about the hidden world of backstage workers. With "Soft Goods," opening Thursday, Sherman hopes to illuminate certain truths about the people in black who lurk behind the scenes at your typical theater.
Sherman doesn't shy from the difficulties that can plague the lives of stagehands. Her show investigates the invisibility inherent in crew work. And then Sherman stretches that concept even further, creating a metaphor for the entire human life cycle.
The idea struck in 2012 when two Walker technicians died suddenly during the same week. One died of suicide at age 47, the other of alcohol-related causes at age 45.
"They were Walker guys, and both came to flaming and self-destructive ends," said Christian Gaylord, the Walker's crew chief. "As a production person, you hide in the shadows with your demons and your consumptions."