Photo by Charlie Winter |
This Halloween, AliveWire Theatrics provides a sepulchral
journey to self-discovery with You Will
Make a Difference, a collaboratively created show more experiential than
story oriented. This relentless string of unrelated scenarios offers the most
chilling seasonal horror: truly bad theater.
Still, the opportunity to wander through the landmark West
Park Presbyterian Church, built in 1889, makes this hodge-podge collection of
material somewhat bearable. Conceived and directed by Jeremy Goren,
the inaugural A/M/P Resident at AliveWire, the audience embarks on a theatrical
adventure, following the performers through several floors of the darkened Romanesque
Revival church—from its balcony to the musty basement—in a quest to
understand exactly what is happening.
Taking
inspiration from medieval pageant plays, the TV show “My So-Called Life,”
Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, the
performer’s own stories, and other diverse sources, You Will Make a Difference, begins when the audience enters the
sanctuary: a grandiose set itself. Rather than using the building to the show’s
benefit, set designer Sandy Yaklin constructs an amateurish set, more
appropriate for an elementary school play. The cast assembles in front of this
Tree of Life facsimile and random scenes unfold: a tribal chant penetrates the
silence, arms rise, bodies move, and lights flicker revealing silhouetted
figures. More posing occurs than acting. Between the cloudy accents and the
lack of a viable sound system, dialogue fades into a guttural verbalize. Lighting
by Jess Greenberg fares better: Especially fun is the disco-like black lighting
of the staircases near the show’s end, which allow the masking tape placed as a
trail to reflect garishly.
As the performers finish this first vignette, disappearing
in a swirl of song and dance, the audience, led by ushers’ flashlights, moves
into a modern kitchen area. Again, performers arbitrarily come and go: a girl
lies on the counter, another fiddles with the refrigerator door, someone else
looks introspectively at the coffee pot. The silence becomes a long-winded
burden, punctuated only by thumping footsteps, or the slam of a pot’s lid.
Welcome to the most depressed collection of people in the world. Finally, the
actors speak and, for a moment, the glorious voyeuristic pleasure of
overhearing conversations sharpens the experience as a variety of characters
(husband/wife, high schoolers, lovers) talk about pimples, the expendability of
women, weekends, and other sundries. This feeling fades when the banality
offers no resonance, no story, and no apparent reason for its utterance.
The remainder of the show takes the audience to the pits of
the basement to see performers squirm their way around the peeling paint and
the discarded furniture. Next, the gathering passes under a bridge of raised
arms to spookily lit staircases to a ballroom area by the kitchen set where
performers act like Hyde Park’s soapbox speakers, asking questions such as,
“What is the American Dream?” and offering the thoughts of whatever persona
captures their fancy. The show ends with a communal meal prepared by
Artist/Chef Anne Apparu. After the marzipan candy, a fiddler plays hoedown and
waltz music so audience and actors can dance with one another. Afterward, when
the usher leading people out was asked: “How long does this go on?” She
answered: “Until we drop of exhaustion.” Her line sums up best the You Will Make a Difference experience.
(Press Ticket)
Performers:
Stephanie Eiss, Tara Elliott, Nicki
Kontolefa, Jeff Kitrosser, Laura Riveros, Derek Spaldo, & Martha
Frances Liv Williams, Samantha Rivers Cole, Ben Lambert, Claire Lebowitz,
Rishika Mehrishi, Courtney Ross, and a rotating group of guest performers
Performances from October 19th -
November 11th, 2012
Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 8pm
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