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Event
Avant GardARAMA!
"Riveting" "Must-see" "Melrose's staging of Bone is sure-handed and unobtrusively intense, featuring a finely crafted, seductively natural and moving performance by Paige Rogers. . . Bone is richly rewarding right down to its marrow." -Robert Hurwitt, San Francisco Chronicle
The Cutting Ball Theater's Avant GardARAMA! July 18 - August 16 An evening of short experimental plays. Directed by Rob Melrose
Like our 2004 edition of Avant GardARAMA! which featured plays by Mac Wellman, Richard Foreman, and Suzan-Lori Parks, our 2008 offering showcases plays that radically experiment with theatrical form. In this case, our three playwrights are American women: Gertrude Stein, Suzan-Lori Parks, and Eugenie Chan. Parks and Chan both acknowledge Stein as an influence and have taken some of her experiments from the twenties and have made them their own.
Accents in Alsace by Gertrude Stein Included in her extraordinary 1922 publication, Geography and Plays, Accents in Alsace is a kind of cubist portrait of World War I. Dont let the formalism throw you. Steins play is as human and touching as any artistic work treating the subject of war.
Betting on the Dust Commander by Suzan-Lori Parks Our fourth Suzan-Lori Parks play in as many years, Betting on the Dust Commander depicts a couple on their wedding night and then years later as the husband steals away to the race track. For Cutting Ball audiences who enjoyed the jazz-like language of The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World, this portrait of a marriage offers a musical logic that is all its own.
Bone to Pick by Eugenie Chan World Premiere Commissioned by The Cutting Ball Theater and Magic Theatre / Z Space New Works Initiative
Bone to Pick sets the story of Ariadne in a diner at the end of the war-torn world. Here, Ariadne, now reconfigured as Ria the Waitress, has been stranded in a military base diner for three-thousand years. Depleted by millennia of foreign occupation, Ria enters the labyrinth and confronts her part in the murder of her brother, Steer #576. A dizzyingly postmodern and playful look at the costs of love and war.
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LocationEXIT on Taylor
277 Taylor St.
San Francisco, CA 94102-2711
United States
Categories
Kid Friendly: No |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: No |
Wheelchair Accessible: No |
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