THEATRE
PREVIEW
KARIN WILLIAMS
AND “THIRD VOICE OF THE NIGHTJAR” AT FRITZ THEATRE
Published in
KPBS On Air Magazine April 1998
A nightjar is a nocturnal bird. So is a theater person. And so, at times, is a mathematician.
Playwright Karin Williams’ latest work “Third
Voice of the Nightjar” (at the Fritz Theater, 4/9-5/10) was inspired by the
diaries of Bertrand Russell. The
brilliant British philosopher was trying to solve a paradox that seemed to
invalidate the complex set theory of mathematics. He spent several years trying to find a way around the
problem. Every night, from eleven to
one, he wandered around in the woods, thinking. He never figured out the answer, but he learned to distinguish
the three different calls of the nightjar.
“I was really touched by that,” says the
soft-spoken Williams. “The idea of
going out and searching for something impossible, and finding something else
instead.” Her latest play, her sixth to
be mounted at the Fritz, where she’s the producing director, is about “a
modern-day scientist working on a logical problem and trying to make a
mathematical breakthrough. Today,
instead of wandering around in the woods, he might go cruising around the
Internet.”
Williams, who grew up in Albuquerque, and spent
some time working in computer technical support, is more familiar with the Web
than the woods. “It’s a very strange
world,” she says. “And the strangest
thing about it is, it can be almost as satisfying as the real world, though
it’s much more empty and soulless.
People can be anyone they want to be; I think that’s the attraction of
it. But online ethics are very
different; you can’t really expect people to be who they say they are.”
In “Nightjar”, for example, Sean is a drug-dealer
whose cyber-persona is a woman. In the
production directed by Bryan Bevell, Williams’ ex-husband and close co-worker
(artistic director of the Fritz), two actors -- Michael Hummel and Michelle Hanks
-- play the dual role. Bevell’s cast
features other Fritz regulars and San Diego favorites: Tim West as the scientist, Beth Bayliss as
his wife, and Lamont Thompson as a sinister computer programmer.
“It’s a lovely, sad play,” says Bevell. “All about love and relationships, what’s
knowable and what’s do-able. Very
philosophical, and very much about obsession, love and lust. It’s a negation of rationalism and science as
tools for the ultimate understanding of life.
The world is a more mystical, complex place than science can
explain... Karin is a remarkably dense
and subtle, dark and funny writer, but not an easy one. This is a very difficult play. It takes place in different realities: cyberspace, dream-space and real space.”
“Cyberspace is a lot easier to stage than you
might imagine,” asserts Williams. “It’s
just like an alternate reality.” That
can probably also be said of some of the playwright’s previous jobs -- from
computers to arts organizations to a one-year stint as a telephone psychic. But it doesn’t take a psychic to predict
that Williams, 33, an enormously talented writer and director, has a bright and
promising future ahead.
©1998
Patté Productions Inc.