The
following articles appeared in Actors Theatre's subscriber newsletter
prior to the 2006 Humana Festival
ACT A LADY
Dorothy is an upstanding,
unflappable Midwesterner, the accordion teacher in her small Prohibition-era
town of Wattleburg. So when Miles, her husband of twenty years, tells
her hes taking part in a play to raise money for the Elks, shes
ready to listen. But when she learns that hell be playing his
part in "fancy-type, women-type clothes," she fears for
his sanity and his soul. She agrees reluctantly, sure hell soon
see the error of his ways. But as rehearsals begin, everyone touched
by the play is changed. Casper, a young photographer, is drawn to
another actor in ways he doesnt have the words to describe.
True is a man with a past and a penchant for pumpkin gin, offered
a chance to change his ways when he meets Lorna the makeup girl, just
back from Hollywood. Miles has scraped together a down payment for
a general store, but soon his dreams ring with the voices of the women
in the play. As for Dorothy, shes just trying to keep her marriage
going in tough times, and has fierce demands for art: It better bring
you closer to God.
Behind the red velvet curtain, Lady Romola is plotting to win the
emeraldand handof the Vicomte Valentino Ufa from her friend
and sincerest enemy, the Countess Roquefort, whose fortunes have waned
in the years leading up to the French Revolution. As these ingénues
of a certain age face off, its the maid Greta who seems to win
the day (and the Vicomte) thanks to the resourcefulness shes
learned from her bloodthirsty rivals. But as Miles, True and Casper
spend more time in front of the footlights, gender lines blur and
everythings up for grabs in this thoughtful, exuberant tale
about the woman in every man, the man in every woman and the power
of theatre to uncover both.
Act a Lady grew from a set of pictures. Jordan Harrison was
commissioned to write a play by Commonweal Theatre Company in Lanesboro,
Minnesota, pop. 788. Looking for a subject that would speak to the
theatre and community, Harrison found several sets of pictures in
the towns historical museum documenting a series of "Womanless
Weddings" which peaked in popularity throughout the Midwest during
the 1920s-1950s, and can still be found today. These productions featured
a towns most prominent men dressed for a formal wedding, from
flower girl to mother of the bride. What struck Harrison in these
pictures was how elegant these men had made themselves, how much effort
theyd clearly gone to. "I started asking myself questions
like: What would it be like to finish a day on a farm and walk around
in heels? What was the conversation these men had with the female
characters they were playing?"
From there, Harrisons imagination started to run wild, and
the wordless Weddings shifted to the carnival of Wildean entendres
and baroque stage business of the French melodrama hes written
for his Wattleburg characters.
Act a Lady explores this experience of living two lives, and as
the play progresses, the stage world starts to bleed into Wattleburg
in surprisingly tangible forms. When Harrison started in the theatre
as a teenage actor, he was wary of the transformative power of wigs,
makeup, and costumes. "I didnt like losing track of myself,"
he says. Act a Lady exploits actings capacity for radical
transformation. "When you memorize someone elses words
and track their experience from beginning to end every night, you
might find a corner of yourself you werent familiar with."
Everyone in town surprises themselves with the corners they find
themselves exploring once they start wearing someone elses
clothing. Harrison exploits the audiences sartorial confusion
as well: "The characters changes are partly a visual
experience; after the curtain falls, you can see the residue of
the Countess character on True as he talks about the power of a
man in a dress. After all, hes still wearing the Countesss
costume. Since the audience is seeing the men in gowns for almost
the entire play, Im hoping they'll start to mistrust traditional
codes of dress."
Ultimately, the play is the story of these characters journeys
to more complex understandings of themselves and their desires.
If lifeand genderis nowhere as simple as the Wattleburg
residents thought, they begin to draw strength from the ambiguities
theyve been plunged into during their contact with the play.
In the end, even Dorothy is willing to give theater a chance, grudgingly
praying: "Lord
help [the play] be art somehow, not just
fellas stretchin out my delicates."
Adrien-Alice Hansel
JORDAN HARRISON
Jordan Harrisons plays cannot be trusted. As soon as he establishes
the rules of his world he subverts them: the living room starts
to shrink, a wax statue of Napoleon lurches to life, and human speech
disintegrates into a cacophony of bangs and whistles. Costumes,
props, and set seem to turn against the characters: these changes
grow increasingly invasive and unpredictable, propelling the play
towards chaos "till everything explodes and then we settle
back to earth again," Harrison explains. But the characters
world, once the dust settles, is forever changed.
The looking-glass physics of Harrisons physical environment
drives characters to introspection. Once inside they must sharpen
their wits and their senses as they take on the messy world with
a childlike sense of wonder. Every new encounter is an experiment
in living as they forge their physical identities afresh. In the
same way, they must reexamine other areas of their lives theyve
taken for granted. Every new encounter is an experiment in living
as they forge their physical identities afresh. In the same way,
they must reexamine other areas of their lives theyve taken
for granted. Kid-Simple rebuilds
sound from the ground up, and even Dorothys tried on pants
by the end of Act a Lady.
Each of Harrisons full-length plays features a different design
convention. Props come to life in The Museum Play, where
curated exhibits scurry from room to room. The set of Finn in the
Underworld constricts as the plot tightens around the characters.
In Kid-Simple, misapplied
sound corrodes human communication, and in Act a Lady, costumes
become characters in their own right, walking off with the bodies
that happen to be wearing them. Harrisons fascination with
dismantling conventions is rooted in his earliest theatre experience.
He regarded costumes and makeup with a kind of cautious wonder.
"I was afraid of Halloween, or any kind of pretending without
the permission of the stage," he recalls. This discomfort impressed
upon him how unfamiliar, even threatening, theatricality can be
when audiences are thrown to the wilderness of a dream world where
the compass arrow is in tailspin, and the map redraws itself.
Though he writes about worlds in chaos, Harrisons own world
is falling neatly into place. He is a resident playwright at New
Dramatists, but his work is in demand at many distinguished theatres
around the nation. Harrison is a recipient of the prestigious Jerome
and McKnight Fellowships from The Playwrights Center in Minneapolis.
He is also writing a new play for The Empty Space Theatre in his
native Seattle. And we are of course delighted to welcome Harrison
back to Actors Theatre of Louisville. Kid-Simple
premiered at Actors Theatre at the Humana Festival in 2004, and
Harrison is the only playwright to have a full-length play produced
at the Humana festival the year after he won the Heideman Award
for a ten-minute play. Harrison fondly remembers past Humana productions,
and thinks of the festival as "my debutante ball and my homecoming
dancethe first big theater to take a chance on my plays, and
the first theater to welcome me back. Playwrights are all looking
for an artistic home, and so far mine has been Actors Theatre of
Louisville."
Jamie Bragg
|