(Click on photo for full effect)
Colony
Collapse: the term referring to the disappearance of honey bees around the
globe is referenced in detail in the
text by the Girl (excellent Emily James) whose polemic statistics regarding the
reduced bee population are staggering.
At rise we meet The Chorus: Jully Lee, Adrian Gonzales, Julie Cardia,
Tracey A. Leigh and Leandro Cano: parents who recount in pantomime and dialogue
.. interspersed in a chorus of ‘Breathe…’ the details of how each of their
children has gone missing. The
parallel reflects the missing children and melds with the missing bees.
Enter
Jason (Riley Neldam) in the middle of the night to his father’s, (Chris Conner)
Mark’s, farmhouse. Jason is
confronted in the dark by Julia (Sally Hughes), Mark’s younger wife. Mark has
divorced from his druggie wife, Jason’s mother, Nicky (over the top Paula
Christiansen) and is attempting to make a new start as a farmer after his own
issues with alcohol and drugs. Jason then becomes a catalyst of sorts who works to compare
the missing Girl and other children to the collapsing colonies of bees. Susan Gratch’s dramatic set
stylistically creates many different playing spaces with the Chorus
serving as occidental koken who move set pieces and props to facilitate the action.
Excellent
use of the space by director Jessica Kubzansky brings the show
dramatically to life. Modern
theatre architecture includes tight wire grids in the flys which are used at
one point to facilitate the Girl literally lying face down high above, talking to the audience about
the bee situation.
Applause
to the Boston Court for hosting this world premiere. Exposing the audience to new and experimental theatre is commendable. Overly
long and somewhat confusing, the play needs help. Perhaps, with
judicious cutting the piece might become a very
interesting play.
COLONY
COLLAPSE
By
Stefanie Zadravec
Directed
by Jessica Kubzansky
The
Boston Court Theatre
70
N. Mentor Avenue
Pasadena,
CA 91106
February
20, 2016
Thursdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m.
Sundays
at 2 p.m. through March 20
with
an added performance on
Wednesday,
March 16, 2016
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