Showing posts with label john taflan is growing as a writer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label john taflan is growing as a writer. Show all posts

Monday, February 14, 2011

Being Harold Pinter (Belarus Free Theatre)


She has been arrested three times for participation in peaceful political and theatrical activities. –Natalia Kaliada

He has been arrested for his professional activities. –Vladimir Scherban

He has been assaulted during peaceful political action and arrested for his professional activities. –Dzianis Tarasenka

She was expelled from her last university year for her cooperation with BFT.

–Irene Iarochevich

He has been arrested for his professional activities and banned from applying for any official job in Belarus because of his cooperation with BFT. –Pavel Haradnitski

He has been put on trial for organizing peaceful political action, and currently, his plays are forbidden from being staged in Belarus. –Nikolai Khalezin

I went to go see Belarus Free Theatre’s Being Harold Pinter, and my head is swimming:

Being Harold Pinter cannot simply be described as a “great” or “amazing” play. Those terms—safe, and summarily applied to works as diverse as Les Miserable and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf—do not adequately convey the call for immediate and necessary engagement with the piece on all levels. One truly feels like a small, wrinkled dick (ugly and inadequate) when the standard, post-show inquiry/exchange is made:

“Hey, John. How was the show, last night?”


Being Harold Pinter was amazing! You should go see it.”

Which isn’t to say that Being Harold Pinter isn’t amazing; it is. But this is not a play whose participants seek to be commended for “hitting that high note” or “getting there during that scene” or “really having the audience in stitches during that one part.” A four-star review on the standard scale is almost an insult. An honest-to-goodness “rave” of Being Harold Pinter would not simply be confined to the pages of a daily rag. It would be the immediate and unquestioned end of tyranny in all forms. Free expression would cease to threaten the marble ringed usurpers of power as they rush abdicate their ill-gotten thrones. You and I would feel ashamed to ever wish pain or suffering on each other, and those terms would be so alien as to send us rushing to our ancient dictionaries with magnifying glasses. Simply put: Being Harold Pinter is a wake-up call. How can you call it a great play when people have died in order for it to exist?

Being that it is a piece of theatre, however, acknowledgment of its success in that medium is necessary: Being Harold Pinter is ingeniously conceived, moving, acted with a formidable honesty, and staged creatively with only four red chairs to serve the storytelling.

However, as a massive “fuck you” to the despotic Belarusian President, Alexander Lukashenko, Being Harold Pinter’s true achievement is indefinable in that conventional sense.

Adaptor and director Vladmir Scherban has merged the terrifying (mostly late-career) plays of Harold Pinter, his infamous Nobel Lecture, and the sickening letters of Belarusian political prisoners into an indictment so awesome in its incisiveness that a genuine fear takes hold of you: This thing is truly dangerous for everyone involved. And you know that going in. But honestly, you really don’t know. You have no clue.

The piece starts benignly enough: We meet a man who—after suffering a bloody fall, being mistaken for dead, and learning he has earned the Nobel Prize in Literature—identifies himself as Harold Pinter. This Pinter confesses that his plays (in this case, The Homecoming and Old Times) were in actuality, revealed to him by the characters that inhabited them. Pinter admits that while he certainly provided a jumping off point for these beings—the first line of dialogue in each piece—what occurred after that was almost entirely out of his control. He confesses that he is simply a conduit through which characters reveal themselves.

This Harold Pinter’s ability to cede control of his art is a high, creative ideal for him. Anything less would mean dishonestly presenting crinkled facsimiles of men and women who move through their lives in storybook blocks of plotting; plays that are delicious upon consumption, but of little nutritional value.

What is terrifying to witness with this knowledge of Pinter’s process in mind however, is the feral state his characters revert to almost immediately: They are petty, mean, full of darkness and a need to dominate each other.

At this point, the desire to draw parallels between these Pinter pieces and the government of Belarus is an inescapable one: Is Pinter God? If Pinter is God, why does he not step in and end the suffering of his characters? If Pinter assumes too much dominance over his characters, does he become Lukashenko? Or, has Pinter’s absence meant Lukashenko can exist in the first place? Are we doomed by a lust for control or are we nothing but that lust given flesh and blood and countries to run?

As Being Harold Pinter continues—drawing from Pinter’s later, more overtly political works such as One For The Road and Ashes to Ashes—the entertaining of parallels is no longer just a thought to be considered at a safe, intellectual distance; Pinter simply becomes Belarus.

We now watch the unmotivated, near-pornographic torture of characters whose consequential slip-ups are never revealed, even to them. Men and women are burned, bitten, taunted, stripped naked, screamed at, and attacked just as Pinter allowed them to be. Why are we watching this? Why are we forced to hear their screams?

Belarus Free Theatre does not allow an escape from this pain. Pinter’s text melts from the mouths of the actors, and what emerges from the bogs of slurry pooling at their feet is a howl from Belarus in its people’s own words: Letters from political prisoners detailing every conceivable injustice man has ever dealt to his brothers and sisters. It is a disgusting scene. It is also triumphant. An entire allegory has been elaborately constructed just to get to this moment. We have been tricked. We thought we were going to see a play but what we really purchased tickets for was a confession made by those who have nothing to atone for. What we should have seen is Alexander Lukashenko begging for forgiveness from every person he has ever harmed. What we should have seen is not this play. We should have seen Belarus Free Theatre’s production of Everything is Great in Our Country and We Get to Go Home Next Week.

The quotations at the top of this piece are taken from the program. At the end of each artist’s bio is a defiant statement of commitment to the piece we have just witnessed. Every one of them has been to prison, been beaten, forced to leave their country, and all for the sake of a play.

And yet, as quickly as I have typed that last sentence, I realize it is incorrect. It is not all for the sake of a play. It is for the sake of life. It is for the sake of peace. It is for the sake of beauty and love.

Being Harold Pinter is amazing. You should go see it.


A+


-John Taflan

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Carmilla (Wildclaw Theatre) JOHN TAFLAN


The theater is not just a place for you to forget your troubles or listen to someone else’s. As a regular theater attendee, I can tell you that if you look closely enough, you will find the stage bursting with nuggets of practical, easy-to-understand advice:
*Opera singers are best when trained by mutilated psychopaths in masks.
*Buffalo nickels are easier to steal when junkies aren’t around.
* Cowboys always sing about the states they live in.
* People like to fall in love with each other.
Sure, on its surface a show may appear to be “entertaining” (what with the tap-dancing, talking, and Brian Dennehy). Deep in its core, however, a play can whisper life-lessons to its audiences…as long as they know how to listen.
That’s why I am thrilled to bring my semi-regular series, Advyce is quite Nyce to the Reviews you can Iews family (unofficially, that is). After we get through all that red tape at the FCC, we’ll be rearing to go in full force. Until that day, please enjoy a taste of what’s to come.
Nyce Advyce #6: Carmilla
Wildclaw’s Carmilla—now in its bodice-annihilating debut at the Department of Tourism’s Cultural Council on the State of the Arts Storefront Theater— is a bloody, sexy, soul-shattering trip that is actually a sensible, down-to-earth guide for young women entering the terrifying mausoleum of pubescence.
What advyce does Carmilla have for our budding daughters? I’m glad you asked:
1. Girls should not make new friends. I know, ladies. I know. It seems so embarrassingly obvious. But if you introduce an “x” factor into your already perfect world, it’s pretty much a guarantee that you will feel hot feelings, question your pre-ordained life-journey and end up bleeding in a cemetery like Brittany Burch (especially if the factor being introduced to happens to be a walking, talking “x”-machine).
2. If a girl does make a new friend (by accident or something), it certainly should not be with an alluring stranger played by Michaela Petro. You will get your ass seduced and thoroughly kicked.
3. Don’t sleep on vampire tombs in graveyards. This one’s a little tougher to stick to. Once you get used to a limestone slab coolly nestling your soft, pink body, heaven help you if you try to go back to hay. I really can’t stress the importance of this enough, though. Sleeping on vampire tombs in graveyards leaves the door wide open for Erin Myers to watch you get drained of your precious fluids while you sleep. And you really don’t want to end up half-naked, bleeding, and roaming the woods like Sara Gorsky.
4. Gypsy paranoia should always be trusted. Yes, they have humps. Can we all just get over it? These mangled souls seem to know exactly what’s up in the world of supernatural sucking with a 90% success rate. Just don’t catch them at a wedding or when they’re about to consummate anything. Scott Barsotti, Allie Kunkler, and Josh Zagoren can attest to that; Allie can twice.
5. Fathers should always look under strange women’s veils. You never know how much trouble it could save you, Charley Sherman. Modesty be damned. The next time you see a woman hiding under some lace, take a yank and see what happens. You may end up discovering your wife.
6. Doctors think smearing blood around abandoned estates solves everything. And it does. Thank you, Steve Herson.
7. Older French and English women are an excellent temporary distraction from any sudden homosexual tendencies you may experience. When you feel a tinge of animal lust for your same-sex friend whom you just met, take a walk down to the tea-swilling, cross-stitching cottage of Moira Begale-Smith and Mandy Walsh. You’ll forget all about your troubles until they find you and seduce you under the full moon.
8. When a new friend is being a little too needy, call a sad German. So you made a new friend and now she wants you to spend eternity with her as some sort of slave. What are you gonna do? Call a sad German. Wotan’s mighty descendants have sensitive sides, too. All it takes is a broken shoelace or a massacred niece to send them into a teary, saber-swinging rage. Step back and watch the Brian Amidei magic as your new friend (and most of your old friends) are torn limb-from-limb in an orgy of spine-ripping and head-cutting-offing.
Now wasn’t that nyce advyce?

Carmilla: A-

- John Taflan