by Alec
Clayton
Published
in The News Tribune, March 8, 2019
The cast of Love and Information, photo courtesy Harlequin Productions |
Caryl
Churchill’s “Love and Information” at Harlequin might well be the strangest
play you’ll see this year. It defies all expectations of what a stage play
should be. I see it more as performance art, a fast-moving collage of vignette-like
scenes. These scenes or “sections” as the playwright calls them might or might
not be related in any way, and according to stage directions in the script, the
sections can be performed in any order. There are more than 50 scenes with
approximately 100 characters played by seven actors.
According
to director’s notes in the program, there are seven sections and each section
contains seven scenes. Most likely audience members will not be able to see
this grouping or patterning of sections. What they, like me, are likely to see are
madcap flashes of scenes that zoom by like rockets, with many unnamed
characters whose relationships with one another change from scene to scene, as
excellently acted by the ensemble cast.
“Love
and Information” is directed by Aaron Lamb, who was in “The 39 Steps,” which
also had a handful of actors playing more than 100 parts. Fittingly, Alyssa
Kay, an actor in this play, was also in “The 39 Steps” – so they are old hands
at playing multiple parts. Other actors are: Fox Rain Matthews, who is married
to Kay and was in “Three Days of Rain” with her; Skylar Bastedo, a talented
professional with 20 years work in children’s theater, in his first performance
at Harlequin; Gerald B Browning, known to Harlequin regulars for his roles in “The
1940s Radio Hour” and “The Love List”; Nicholas Main, an Olympia native in his
first appearance on the Harlequin stage; and Shauntal Pyper and Janet Spencer, both
seasoned professionals in their Harlequin debuts.
Jeannie
Beirne’s scenic design and John Serembe’s video design play a significant role
in this production. The set appears to be a combination of the interior of a
computer and Stone Hinge. Seven large panels stand at the back of the stage. On
them are designs that look like computer circuit boards upon which are
projected constantly changing videos, most of which relate, literally or abstractly,
to the scenes being acted out. In front of these panels are modular boxes that
are constantly rearranged by the cast to serve as chairs, beds, and other props
– even as a piano.
The
scenes consist of discussions related to the information age, to the nature of
love, to terrorism, to, in effect, almost everything that is a part of the age
we live in. The relationships between the videos and what is happening on stage
is sometimes serendipitous and sometimes contradictory. For instance, in a scene
about terrorism, there is a video of war on the center panel while playing
simultaneously on the other panels are videos of sports (simulated war),
including a Seahawks game.
Most
reviews of the production see it as a meditation on the successes and failures
of human communication, but Lamb feels this misses Churchill’s larger point.
Says Lamb, “The question I am asking is: where is the intersection between data
and emotion? At what point do chemical reactions become human experiences, and
in that chain reaction, where do we become human?”
“Love
and Information” is smart and funny, but impossible to understand if approached
with the expectation of a traditional story arc. Some people will not get it
and will be disappointed, but those who enjoy artistic experimentation should
love it.
It
is a short play at 80 minutes with no intermission.
WHAT:
Love and Information
WHEN:
8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, through March 23
WHERE:
State Theatre, 202 4th Ave. East, Olympia
TICKETS:
$12-$15
INFORMATION:
https://harlequinproductions.org/
(360) 786-0151
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