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Feb 2011 13

Hey folks.

If you’re planning on swinging by Transistor on Saturday, February 19th, heads-up: we’re taking the month off. Don’t that let that deter you, though. If you’re in the market for a clock made out of a record or a miniature theramin, Transistor is the place to go. Trust me: you’ll feel about 63% hipper just by walking in the door.

Otherwise, check out the revival of Postmortem, our improvised documentary based on performance days’ obituaries, at the Viaduct Theatre on Western.

The next Frequency will be on Saturday, March 19th at 8pm. As usual, it won’t cost you a dime, and as usual, we will have free drinks and snacks on hand.

Hope to see you there. . . if not at Postmortem.

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Feb 2011 12

This winter has been

quite a trying time for us…

Let Springtime commence.

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Feb 2011 06

Saturday again…

Just like the previous week,

This haiku is late.

Feb 2011 05

Maybe it’s because I just turned 45.

For some reason, 45 seems more substantial than any year since, maybe, 33 (which meant I outlived Jesus).

Maybe it’s because I’ve finally put some demons to rest (but – oh – be careful.  Demons tend to go into hibernation and wait til you aren’t looking and then join the party from the side door wearing a Big Party Hat and bearing Destruction as a party favor) and am looking at the balance of my Days Thus Far from a wiser vantage point.

Whatever it is, Postmortem has become a genuine Benchmark show for me.

The simple idea of having ten improvisers get up onstage and create a fictional account of a life lived and written about in a few paragraphs is daunting and amazing.  The whole experiment reminds me of Orson Scott Card’s Ender’s Game Series and the concept of The Speaker for the Dead.

In this novel’s precursor, Ender’s Game, the last surviving member of ‘the Buggers’ contacts the lead character (Ender Wiggin), who had unwittingly wiped out the rest of the species. Ender tells the story of the Buggers as it is related to him, and publishes it as The Hive Queen under the pseudonym “Speaker for the Dead.” The audience of The Hive Queen is not aware of the identity of the author (or that the work is factual and not speculative). However, Hegemon Peter Wiggin (Ender’s brother) recognized the writing and requested that Ender also act as ‘his’ “Speaker”. Ender complies with the request by writing a second book titled The Hegemon, giving a parallel, but uniquely human, perspective to the ideas and lessons of “The Hive Queen”.

The two books become classics and inspire the rise of a movement of Speakers for the Dead. The movement is not a religion, although Speakers are treated with the respect accorded to a priest or cleric. Any citizen has the legal right to summon a Speaker (or a priest of any faith, which Speakers are legally considered) to mark the death of a family member. Speakers research the dead person’s life and give a speech that attempts to speak for them, describing the person’s life as he or she tried to live it. This speech is not given in order to persuade the audience to condemn or forgive the deceased, but rather a way to understand the person as a whole, including any flaws or misdeeds.

SOURCE

At it’s best, Postmortem treats the life of the Subject in the same way – no research but an unflinching portrayal of an ordinary person going through life, making choices, changing perspectives, learning lessons and, ultimately, just getting through it all.

And here’s the thing – a live lived without trials or adversity or bad luck or hardship A) doesn’t exist although we like to pretend it does and B) is fucking dull to watch unfold.  Every one of us is a sinner and a saint, an ideologue and a hypocrite, both full of wisdom and full of shit.  We all judge others for their heinous natures while hiding our own so that we aren’t judged in turn.  Every one of us is jealous, petty, generous and self sacrificing – all in different moments and at different times.

When it works, the cast of Postmortem behaves collectively like a Speaker for the Dead, offering a way into a life that allows us to attempt to understand ourselves as a whole.

I’d love to see you swing by the Viaduct and check it out.

Feb 2011 02

As we prepare to reprise the strange and wonderful world of Postmortem, here’s a taste of what’s to come…

_____

SOURCE: Chicago Reader (2000)

Postmortem, WNEP Theater Foundation, at the Playground.

Inspired by our fascination with obituaries and the raw appeal of real lives, the WNEP Theater Foundation has found fresh fodder for improvisation. Each night a tight ensemble of seven performers takes a newspaper obituary and performs an hour-long characterization loosely based on that small amount of information. The real strength of this concept is that the actors give us more than just a hypothetical survey of one person’s life, also portraying characters who have no direct contact with the central figure to provide context and comedy. The atmosphere created for each of the decades represented (the 1920s through 1990s the night I attended, introduced by audio vignettes from each period) grounds the production, making it a comment on America’s history as well as that of the individual.

This sort of improvisation isn’t solely devoted to making the audience laugh easily and often–although there are funny moments. On opening night the audience heard tales of babies lost to the croup, jobs terminated, suicides prompted by the 1929 crash, women who attempted to sell their sons for drugs, and bitter, estranged couples who could not forgive. Carrying themes through the decades and their various characters, the talented cast show off their skills. Conveying wit and drama in a truly human manner, Postmortem successfully mines a concept that could easily have been exploitative. –Jenn Goddu

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