Blurring the
line between fiction and reality
Published in the Weekly Volcano, Aug. 25, 2016
Steve Gallion as the Father and Kathryn Grace Philbrook as the Director, photos courtesy New Muses Theatre
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New Muses
Theatre Company is among a handful of lesser-known companies that produces
excellent theater for mostly sparse audiences. By my count, here were only 10
people in the audience opening night of Luigi Pirandello’s absurdist play Six Characters in Search of an Audience.
The actors outnumbered the audience by one.
That small audience
witnessed an intelligent, challenging, well-written and well-acted play.
It is a play
that calls into question the relationships between fiction and reality, between
actors and the characters they play, and between characters and the author. In
New Muses’ interpretation, it starts before it starts with a bit of pre-curtain
play between two actors (Vivian Bettoni and Eric Cuestas-Thompson) playing a
couple of unnamed actors running lines before rehearsal. They stand off to the
side and speak softly as the audience enters. Most of the audience can’t hear
them and perceptibly pay no attention. It is almost as if the audience is an
unwilling part of the play. I was sitting close to the two actors and could
hear that their dialogue was about the age-old question of the chicken and the
egg. The play they are preparing to rehearse is Mixing It Up, also by Pirandello. I thought this pre-play bit was
inventive but slightly confusing, and that it was too long. But it segued
nicely into the actual play, which starts out even more confusing but soon
begins to make sense. And it did make me wonder if others who seemed to be
entering as audience members might also be actors.
Amina Ali and Steve Gallion |
Just as the
director (Kathryn Grace Philbrook) gets ready to start the rehearsal, a strange
family invades the theater. The director tells them it’s a closed rehearsal and
they have to leave, but they refuse. The father (Steve Gallion) says they are
looking for an author. They are unfinished characters in an unfinished play,
and they have to find the author in order to complete themselves. At first, the
director is outraged, but as the father and his stepdaughter (Amina Ali) began
to tell their story, the director becomes intrigued and decides to produce
their story as a play with the highly skeptical actors playing the parts of
these real characters. So the director and the family argue over their story
and how to present it, and the family — most adamantly father and the
stepdaughter, who laughs outrageously in the actors’ faces, —thinking the
actors are doing a terrible job of portraying them.
The family’s
story is that the father had sent his wife (Becky Cain-Kellogg) and their son
(Karter Duff) away, and she later had three more children by another man: two
younger children (11-year-old Corey Cross and 7-year-old Keiralee Monta), and
the now grown stepdaughter, whom the father tried to seduce, ostensibly not
knowing who she was.
It is a wild
and imaginative play filled with absurdist arguments about what is real and
what is play acting and about the relationships between actors, the characters
they play, and authors, without whom the characters cannot exist. It is
presented in the round with no set decoration and no set pieces other than a
table and a few chairs.
Niclas Olson,
founder and managing artistic director of New Muses, adapted Pirandello’s play
and does a fine job of directing it. The three lead characters, Gallion,
Philbrook and Ali, are outstanding, making unbelievable characters totally
believable. Ali is brash and seductive, and has a marvelous laugh. Philbrook
plays the director as a most complex character, arrogant and sure of herself, which
turns out to be a cover-up for self-doubt. She beautifully and convincingly
portrays the director’s astonishment at the audacity to these interlopers at
her rehearsal. And by-the-way, the director was a man in the original. Gallion
plays the father as a kind of bumbling but sincere man who lurches around the
stage in a manner that brings to mind Peter Falk as Columbo. I’ve seen Gallion
in only one other play, New Muses’ Romeo
and Juliet; I hope to see much more of him.
Six Characters in Search of an Author is presented in one act
and runs approximately 90 minutes.
Six Characters in Search of
an Author,
8 p.m. Thursday-Saturday and 2 p.m., Sunday through Aug. 28, $10, Dukesbay
Theater, Merlino Arts Center, 508 S. Sixth Ave., Tacoma.www.NewMuses.com.
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