Dear David Lynch, Mark Frost, and co.,
Do you realize that Michelle Levy identifies objects and subjects that perform magic? It would be an unlucky mistake to reject her power.
Advising you to Cooperate,
Caroline Woolard
AIR, Queens Museum of Art
Dear David Lynch, Mark Frost, and co.,
Do you realize that Michelle Levy identifies objects and subjects that perform magic? It would be an unlucky mistake to reject her power.
Advising you to Cooperate,
Caroline Woolard
AIR, Queens Museum of Art
Dear David,
Michelle Levy is a remarkable artist whose sole mission is to deliver from darkness to light, the proto-paternal/romantic male figures of her life. One of the most important of these figure is Agent Cooper, a figure in transit between non-place and place, between cinematic fiction and the real (aging) body of the actor, and now between the 90s and the 2010’s: the span of a generation.
I hope you have an idea of what Michelle is asking of you. To my mind, it seems like the perfect moment to foster a secondary story, that of an aspiring young artist who counts your work as key to the narrative of her own coming-of-age. It should not be an interruption, it is another story running under the main story, deepening the complexity of its host: embedding the social impact of the original, within the fabric of its own renewal.
Sincerely Yours,
Jen Liu
Artist
Dear Messrs. Lynch and Frost,
An appearance by visual and performance artist, Michelle Levy, in the new series of Twin Peaks, might add a further embedded code to your complex psychological riddle. She brings with her an army of fans from the art world who have diligently followed her quest for Agent Cooper. Her desire to rescue Cooper after his disappearance into The Black Lodge is commendable; there is something of the medieval platonic love to it. Cooper shares such values. He is the prince come to save Laura. Levy comes to save him. She kept Cooper alive when others thought he may never make it back. She did not forget him.
A brief appearance by Levy, who has such an evident psychic connection to Cooper, might read as nothing to those who are out of her loop, but to those in the know, it would resolve a years’ long project – a slow hunt for Cooper that has arisen not purely by chance – in a brilliant manner.
Levy is magnetic on stage. Her Cooper project has gained a cult following in response to her and the source material. And she is deeply photogenic and engaging, like most of your cast.
Please consider her request to appear.
On behalf of the European fan base,
Sincerely,
Kate McCrickard
Paris
Dear Mr. Lynch,
Perhaps the chief reason why Michelle Levy is ideal to participate in the project of the return of Twin Peaks, is because she is above and beyond unlike any other person. I have known Michelle for eight years and I know that her exceptional nature is exemplary of the fascinating, complex and absurd characters of Twin Peaks.
She found something in Agent Cooper that is undeniably in her: a tenacious and unyielding sense of query. She is convinced she can connect with him, and because of this like trait, it is undeniably so. To be sure, she already has. To miss the opportunity to include her would be to pass up the potential for magic that follows Michelle wherever she treads: from reality to imaginary and back.
In reality, between curating acclaimed exhibition programming at the Elizabeth Foundation Project Space in Manhattan, she has honed performance work that is nothing short of masterful in its capacity to harness the imagination and heart of an audience. This was evident in one of her early Agent Cooper related performances wherein ones future was told and/or wish fulfilled on the paper plate licked clean of the perfect cherry pie. In the imaginary, Michelle’s childhood being and adult yearning make more sense of the world than a lot of truth; she created her own reality where Cooper looks over her Brooklyn haunts.
Michelle is a serious, talented performer, curator and artist. As a fan of Twin Peaks, an admirer of Michelle and as an artist, it is without reservation that I highly suggest you give me and all of my fellow Michelle Levy admirers the honor of witnessing her interact with your beautiful and dangerous world.
Yours,
Angela Conant
Michelle Levy is not a fan of Twin Peaks, she is already a part of it.
Where the first Twin Peaks left off, Michelle carried on: asking new questions, prodding and entering into new mysteries, focusing the themes of alternating realities, extending them into the real and unreal spaces of performance.
If Cooper is coming back, I can only assume the seances worked. The pie had the intended effect. Michelle has performed a feat of great wonder. Now it’s only fair they meet in person to complete the circle. And to share a hot cup of coffee. Let the vision that led to a new vision become a vision of its own.
Doug Levy
NYC
Countless fans have been awaiting the return of Twin Peaks over the past two and a half decades, but Michelle Levy is the only one who has spent years actively Searching for Agent Cooper. And she has found him -in flashes. At moments when his turns of phrase seem to resonate most, such as Occupy Wall Street, or in places so strangely beautiful as the Gowanus Canal or Coney Island, she has glimpsed him. But only for a flickering moment. Just long enough to snap a photograph, and he’s gone.
I think a lot of us have wondered idly after an episode what we might say over a cup of coffee and a slice of pie with Agent Dale Cooper. But Michelle Levy is the person who actually has something urgent to say to him upon his return. Something she has been preparing to say through years of elegant and transporting performance art. Something only she has been able to sense all these years. Something that I suspect you will find very soon on a page in your writers’ room and recognize immediately as the words you’ve been searching for. You may wonder: whose words are these? Who is meant to deliver them to Cooper on Twin Peaks? Michelle Levy. That’s who.
-Sunita Prasad
artist and filmmaker
NYC