THEATRE
PREVIEW
BLACKFRIARS
THEATRE AND “THE PUPPETMASTER OF
Published
in KPBS On Air Magazine February 1992
You're peering
into a small, dark, cluttered room. The
man inside, with the numbers tattooed on his arm, hasn't left the place in five
years. The light is dim, but as you
squint and focus, you can see that behind the black gauze of walls, there are
human limbs protruding. Enter the
imagination of “The Puppetmaster of Lodz”, as brought to you by Blackfriars
Theatre (opening February 14).
The company
itself has been boxed in -- by its name.
Known for ten years as the Bowery Theatre, artistic director Ralph Elias
felt the original moniker had negative connotations, recalling the Bowery Boys
films or the bums on
The new
appellation has a long history and positive associations. Blackfriars was the name of the theater in
which The King's Men, the company for which Shakespeare acted and wrote, began
performing in 1608. It's a serious
sobriquet, and that's just what Elias was aiming for. ""As we're trying to expand our audience and basis of
support," he explains, "we want more people -- audience, foundations
and contributors -- to take us seriously.
Our name should reflect that we take ourselves seriously. The Bowery name was kind of tongue-in-cheek,
regarding the original seedy location in the basement of a seedy residential
hotel in a questionable neighborhood (Fifth and Elm), with a questionable
liquor store across the street."
At the same
time as the Blackfriars took on a new name, it home-base -- formerly the
Kingston Hotel, with its Kingston Playhouse -- has changed hands and
names. It's now the
The theater
company, meanwhile, like most in
A creation of
Gilles Segal, a Romanian Jew writing in French, the bittersweet dramatic piece
received its American premiere at the Milwaukee Repertory Theater in 1989. ""It's not just another heavy-duty
essay on the emptiness of the post-Holocaust world," says Elias. "It's a unique look at the results of
overwhelming events. Very entertaining,
very theatrical, often very funny."
It has to do
with Finkelbaum, who was a puppeteer in the Polish city of
We meet him
five years after the war. Finkelbaum
refuses to believe that the war and the Holocaust are over. He refuses to come out of his
apartment. He lives with his puppets in
a fantasy world, even treating and talking to one of them as his wife.
""He
lives in fantasy to maintain his sanity," Elias explains. "He's a kind of Everyman, who
represents any thinking, feeling person in the late twentieth century. We're all so overwhelmed by realities and
events: the threat of nuclear war, the
irreparable damage to the environment, the decline of American civilization. Finkelbaum is trying to make sense of things
for himself. If he accepts the reality
of the world, he will surely go insane.
His fantasy is sanity; reality is madness."
It's no easy
task to capture onstage the subtleties of Finkelbaum's internal and external
world. Once again, as in their prior,
marvelously felicitous collaborations ("Teibele and Her Demon,"
"Abundance"), Elias turned to SDSU professor Beeb Salzer for scenic
design.
The challenge
for Salzer was recreating Finkelbaum's inner world, and getting the audience to
enter into that world. "The
question here," he says, "is whether the audience will understand
that this is not a real world. It's
kind of in his head. His whole life is
in his head. The set will be a very
dark presence, but strange, funny things happen along the way."
And why the
body-parts walls? "Because the
memory is not present in the actual text until later," says Salzer. "But it's hanging over everything the
whole time, and it explains why he's doing what he's doing. You have to get into the head of these
kinds of characters. If we're not all
like him in some way -- making up our own world and protecting ourselves with
our fantasies -- there's no point; then this is just an extreme case. We all lie to ourselves. But we don't all have puppets."
©1992 Patté
Productions Inc.