Monday, 12 November 2012

The Fab Five Reflection




The Odyssey was an interesting play to say the least. It was one of those plays that made me think “Wow…. Human beings can be WEIRD”. But despite the weirdness, it was still a beautiful production. Even though I didn’t understand what was going on for four fifths of the play, it still managed to fill me with emotion. Happiness, laughter, anger, panic, confusion, sadness; It was all felt.
The types of post modernism that I thought were in The Odyssey are:
                    Non linear (change in language, change in characters)
                    Open theatre (you could see props and mic stands on stage, no blackouts, stage managers came on stage, you could see the backstage area)
                    Macaronic (change in language, shows the conflicts within the family, uses music and physicality to express strong emotion like anger, shows the perspectives of the males and females and makes them very distinct from each other)
                    Spectacular theatre/use of technology (projection of the man making music on his iPad thing)
                    Movement Art (there were moments of a lot of movement and very slow movement)
                    Verbatism (there are moments of solo performances like the main character or the woman)
                    Dangerous theatre (deals with issues in the character’s life, rape, sex, nudity, violence and a lot of sensory assault)

Scorched Moments

            Telemachus comes on stage in his 80s/90s clothing and starts trying to pronounce the word Angel wish difficulty.
A man in nothing but a diaper starts posing in the middle of the stage looking like Michelangelo. He’s shaking and sweating. In the background Telemachus starts pouring water over his head and throwing himself around the stage. The man posing grabs something out of his diaper and Telemachus takes it and is rubbing it all over his face. His face is red and he is dancing and screaming to heavy metal. This was the most powerful moment for me. It was so filled with anger and confusion and panic.
Telemachus and a guitarist who looks like a stage manager comes to the front of the stage and starts to sing Creep by Radiohead. It’s funny and makes the whole audience laugh, even the Koreans. After, he comes out into the audience climbing over people and chairs and speaking over people faces. The same way the woman came out previously to collect flowers from the audience members.
The other woman in the 2 sex scenes which seemed more like a rape scene… I wasn’t too sure. A Woman in a fat suit walking back and forth chanting “Tak tak tak” (yes) wearing her self out until she can no longer carry on and the her going into a beautiful, epic monologue about the doing of men.
There was an unmistakable sense of pain in every scene.

Black Watch… Oh my god. This play was just mind blowing incredible. I can’t pick out individual scorched moments in this play. For my the entire thing was a scorched moment (although the traditional Scottish songs, filled with beautiful harmonies, were pretty powerful and stood out to me). I can’t really explain what about it was so incredible but those who saw it would know what I mean. It was so emotional and the stories felt so real and truthful that it was so clearly understandable and so relatable even if you haven’t experienced war at all. I also found it so true to its roots. I was worried that this play would be watered down culturally so that Koreans could understand it and so people wouldn’t get offended, but, nope, it wasn’t watered down one bit. There was a whole rainbow of colourful language in the play, the accents were SO incredibly strong that even I had difficulty understanding even though I used to live in a neighbourhood of Scots and one of my best friends was Scottish. It also really brought out the importance of friendship and sticking together (in the last scene with the marching). This message really stuck to me because I’m one of those people who thinks strong friendships are the most important thing there is.

The elements of po mo theatre that I think are in Black Watch include
-       Non linear (it shifts from the interview in the pub to the events in the war)
-       I think it includes open theatre (the stage was very “raw”. It was made up of just scaffolding and containers at either and everything was on the actually stage, including the audience. The audience looked down onto the stage instead of having the standard stage setup)


-       Global theatre (it doesn’t really bring cultures together, but the characters in the play bring up that the people of Iran are more innocent than they are which shows an understanding they have)
-       Black watch is hugely Macaronic (it’s about the people in the war in Iran and how they deal with their problems, mental or physical, their disagreements of the war, their anger about it, and the different thoughts about it from all the different characters)
-       Movement Art (includes marching, extreme athleticism, singing, badpipes, etc.)
-       Verbatism (there are scenes of political monologues, like the history of the black watch, political announcements so that the audience can catch up with that is happening in terms of events and timeline)
-       Technology (there is use of projections for subtitles which is needed to understand what the actors are saying, and there is use of tv screens to show news broadcasts or night vision cameras, etc.)

1 comment:

  1. Hi Emma, I am going back and reading all the blog entries from second quarter. I am glad you wrote about two of the plays you saw as that was the requirement for the task. Also, I am glad that you focused on elements of po-mo as well as your general reaction to each play. Responding to the technical elements of the shows is very important as well. Be sure to discuss that in the future blogs. The more specific you are and focused your responses are, the better. If you have seen additional plays, always include them in your blog.

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