THEATRE REVIEWS:
“DEFYING GRAVITY” at North Coast Repertory Theatre
&
"WIRELESS CITY"
- Eveoke Dance theatre & Palomar College
KPBS
AIRDATE: FEBRUARY 9, 2001
Man and machine. Two
perspectives on a relationship gone awry. At North Coast Repertory Theatre,
there's "Defying Gravity," a history/memory/fantasy about the
Challenger Shuttle disaster. Downtown at the ReinCarnation Project, in what's
being called the Dairy-Aire Performance Space, there's "Wireless
City," a futuristic, cyber-techno-carnival. Both pieces share a theme and
a fatal flaw -- there really isn't a hint of subtlety in sight. Both have the
best of intentions, even making psycho-political points. But in both cases, the
message is buried under a pretty big heap of detritus.
"Wireless
City" is the worse offender. Presumably intentionally, it is loud,
repetitive and assaultive. After entering through a walkway whimsically lined
with computer monitors, the audience stands or walks around the high-ceilinged
warehouse space, while characters do and don't interact with you, do and don't
scream out techno messages, and generally rage against the machine.
Wireless City, the
program spells out for us, is a marketing scheme that sells people on a vision
of tomorrow in which technology offers complete freedom: "connectivity
without connection." As we all know, that future is now. But here in
Wireless City, everyone is hooked up to the Engine of Desire, a sexy woman
crucified above us, strapped and wired, warning of and then executing the
various divine downloads and upgrades: from Eros to Resurrection to Ascension,
all on the way to The Great Convergence.
It is all less
interactive than advertised, less groundbreaking than promised. And much longer
than necessary. In this collaborative effort by Palomar College students,
produced by Eveoke Dance Theatre, there are some very haunting images… Noelle,
for instance, that Engine of Desire, Tori Kurzwell, the artificial woman, and
Charlene Penner, the beautiful Butoh dancer, who makes her searing, silent way
in and out of an Apple Computer box. With all its cutting-edge look, it still
has a retro feel… and a timeworn message. But maybe those 20-somethings, who
haven't heard it before, really need to hear it now.
A fine reminder of
techno-hubris and human error is the Challenger disaster. Playwright Jane
Anderson goes after it with a vengeance, using gravity as her starting point,
and giving us gravitas instead, offering a variety of 2-dimensional characters,
each with a stock in the Cape Canaveral launch of 1986. Most of them are fairly
well motivated, from the young girl who watches her teacher/mother go up -- and
blow up -- in outer space, to the jaded ground crew member, to the retirees who
drive their Winnebago cross country to watch the historical event. But no
matter how hard she tries, Anderson can't get Claude Monet to make a bit of
sense here, weaving through the piece as he does, spewing lovely, lyrical
lines.
The cast of seven gamely
does their best, making multi-dimensional characters where there often aren't
any, and holding this choppy, episodic piece together as best they can, under
the confident, creative hand of director Cynthia Stokes. In this case, as in
"Wireless City," the play is not the thing… But if it makes you
think, then art and technology have linked up in inner space.
©2001 Patté Productions Inc.