Arron Lewis Photography
Flagging Interest: A Nazi woman (Alika Spencer) wraps herself in the flag to make a point about 'The Bill of [W]rights' in a provocative new show by RTE. |
The Rights Of Fall
Renegade Theatre Experiment takes a multifaceted look at the Ten Amendments
By Marianne Messina
LEGAL DOCUMENTS like the Bill of Rights are not moldy,
stuffy things but the squirmy, slippery spawn of a seminal dialectic
between personal fears and desires-at least that's the sense you get
from Bill of (W)Rights, a prickly production by Renegade Theatre Experiment at its best. The show is actually a series of
vignettes written by nine playwrights, each inspired by a different
constitutional amendment and exercising the playwright's free-speech
rights to the max. The play earns its subtitle in spades: "A Walking Tour of
American Freedom"-or rather, the audience earns it. Divided into two
groups, we're led from room to hallway to outdoor courtyard, where
different scenes are staged. Director Susannah Greenwood and crew
cleverly coordinate the odyssey (with the aid of wireless
communication) to create a fascinating sense of examining our Bill
of Rights on many scales and from many angles. Group scenes full of
human diversity-the "angry black woman," the "cracker," the "gay
man"-take place on the main stage, at first distanced from the
audience, but then spilling out into the seating area. Intimate
scenes take place in a classroom, benches provided. From a few feet away, we watch a husband (Jagjit Choudhary) and
wife (Letha Remington) argue over who's spying on whom. Has she read
their teen's diary? Has he placed spyware on her computer? Read her
journal?. In another scene, the audience stands in the Hoover
Theater hallway, which doubles as the hall outside a courtroom,
while a juvenile delinquent (in black lipstick and black fishnet arm
guards) argues her innocence with her father. Molly Gazay as Tina
fumes, paces and kicks the walls (right next to this writer, I might
add) in petulant outbursts. Though Bill of [W]Rights isn't one of those productions
that drafts audience members into the show, it can have you feeling
like a voyeur in some public space, overhearing-or eavesdropping
on-private lives. And the private lives force the recognition that
"the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses,
papers, and effects against unreasonable searches" cannot be
discussed as an abstract, unrelated to personal psychology. One of the most illuminating-and ghastly-scenes (other than
soldiers quartered in a private home who gleefully molest the lady
of the house, Third Amendment) takes place outside, in one of the
Hoover's open courtyards. We watch as the hooded Jet Chhay lurks by
the courtyard gate. We hear a car pull up, oldies blaring out the
window. As soon as Jeff Swan comes through the gate, Chhay begins
taunting him. Around the perimeter, audience members face each other
as part of the scene, especially pronounced in the broad daylight of
the Sunday matinee. As the twisted exchange between Chhay and Swan
unfolds, the witnessing effect starts to feel like the infamous New
York slaying of Kitty Genovese in front of dozens of witnesses. I
can only imagine how eerie this scene must be at evening
performances under the courtyard lights. Because each playwright focuses on a different amendment, themes
are all over the place-invasive spying, abuse of authority, freedom
to address taboo subjects-but ultimately this directs your attention
back to the Bill of Rights itself. Have no doubt, Renegade's bold
production makes waves. The post-show talk-back was one of the
liveliest I've seen. (Yes, this is adult material. No, America is
not Disneyland.) Unlike some experimental theater that is so
invasive you want to slap it, this production leaves enough space
for a truly active and enlightening experience. Bill of [W]Rights, a Renegade Theatre Experiment
production, plays Thursday-Saturday at 8pm and Sunday at 2pm through
Sept. 23 at the Historic Hoover Theater, 1635 Park Ave., San Jose.
Tickets are $18/$20. (408.351.4440) Send a
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