

In the program for The Black Rider at the Ahmanson, Susan Sontag is quoted as experiencing a "shock of recognition" at her first Wilson production, and the essay goes on the make much of this aspect of the director's work. I found this description somewhat surprising in that it seems to me that Wilson is going for the reinforcement of distancing eccentricity: costumes are lavishly made of materials that could not survive quotidian exposure; the choreography emphasizes how readily the body moves against rhythm; language is not a vehicle of meaning; faces are not palettes for relevant emotions, but disembodied theatrical props. Perhaps Sontag was evoking Freud's notion of the uncanny, deriving "its terror not from something externally alien or unknown but--on the contrary--from something strangely familiar which defeats our efforts to separate ourselves from it." The effect of Wilson's vision in combination with the work of Waits and Burroughs is utterly compelling and disturbing.
The general plot of The Black Rider is simple - a young clerk must make a deal with the devil to acquire magic bullets that will allow him to prove his hunting prowess and marry his beloved. The execution of this narrative, however, is not so straightforward, but this is where the beauty lies. Unfortunately, I had two middle-aged couples next to me who were not prepared for Wilson's style. (If I were still living in New York, I would make some crack about how they were probably from New Jersey. Orange County, perhaps?) For most of the first act, they sighed, rolled their eyes, laughed uncomfortably. The husbands comforted their wives by rubbing their backs in some effort at protection from the unconventional ideas. At intermisson, they proclaimed, "There is absolutely nothing about this play that is not challenging!" I think Wilson, Waits, and Burroughs would be proud.
-
No comments:
Post a Comment