THEATRE PREVIEW
SLEDGEHAMMER
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine November
1991
Uh-oh.
They're boasting about "incestuous relationships" and
"unnatural acts." Sledgehammer
Theatre is at it again.
The play is “7 blowjobs” by the hip, hot,
Obie Award-winning playwright Mac Wellman (some may remember his “Albanian
Softshoe”, a weird little piece that created somewhat of a furor at the San
Diego Rep a few seasons back). The Los
Angeles Times gave the new play's title a mention; the
"The title of the play is the most
obscene or controversial part of it," says Sledgehammer's executive
producer, Ethan Feerst. "And after
saying the title day after day, it becomes just a word. The novelty wears off." Wellman certainly didn't want his title
changed or revised. On one of several
working visits to
Anyway, it's a political piece, a world
premiere about censorship by conservative forces in
So much for triple-X ratings. We still have to deal with the
"incest," which comes in the guise of the close, long-term
relationship between Sledgehammer and the San Diego Repertory Theatre. (Feerst, citing Sledgehammer's ongoing
cooperation with a variety of mainstream theater companies, calls it "incestuous
symbiosis").
Sledgehammer's artistic director, Scott
Feldsher, directs the San Diego Rep's sixteenth annual production of “A
Christmas Carol” (November 30-December 29).
The Rep's artistic director, Douglas Jacobs, is re-writing the
adaptation. And Jacobs also plays a
role in “7 blowjobs” -- Senator Bob, the one who is mysteriously sent the
offending titular photographs of "unnatural acts."
Feldsher was on staff at the Rep from
1985-1988, as literary manager, casting director and associate director. He and Jacobs have remained friends, and the
Rep folks thought Feldsher would be a great one for giving
"The epic structure of “Christmas
Carol” is very image-oriented and at least formally, very close to what I
do," he says, though we have to hear more before we're convinced. "It's going to be very dream-like, very
presentational. It won't be (as were
the Rep's past two years' productions) about the homeless, or a high-concept
version." But don't worry. "It will be provocative," Feldsher
assures us. "I'm not making
Scrooge a transvestite or anything.
There isn't any violence in the story per se. Although there is the psychological violence in abusing
children. And sex? Well, Scrooge rediscovers his feminine side,
realizes he was in love once, sees a certain sexuality in himself." Oh boy.
The potential for Sledgehammering expands. But, Feldsher explains, "The provocative elements will be
visual, what we do with the imagery and the story."
He says he hasn't been reined in at all by
the Rep, and Sledgehammer was “allowed to be as creative and take as many
liberties as I want." He's decided
to focus on the children, which he felt to be very important to Dickens. "The central imagery of the story is
ignorance and want," he says.
"In
Feldsher will explore the juxtaposition of
the "low level music-hall humor" of the piece and its
"incredible range of spirituality."
The production will be "very eclectic in terms of visual and
performance style, but also very beautiful, with a strong sense of
spirituality." Beautiful? Sledgehammer??
"As a director," Feldsher, 27,
admits, "I'm going through a bit of transformation. I started directing for public scrutiny (at
UCSD) at age 20. I've kind of grown up
in front of everyone. I'm more
conscious of the spiritualism in my own life now. Maybe the cynicism has been a little bit tempered. We can have beauty alongside the garish and
ugly. All artists grow and change."
These two productions seem to represent the
old and the new Sledgehammer, but Feldsher sees sharp parallels between
“Christmas Carol” and “blowjobs”.
"Both are very language-oriented.
And very tightly written. There
are a lot of structural similarities.
Both have biting satire, being alternately funny and hopeful, honest and
frightening." Back on the subject
of exasperating an audience, Feldsher turns to “blowjobs”: "Compared to a lot of other things,
it's not something people will walk out on because of the language. But maybe because of the satire."
©1991
Patté Productions Inc.