Showing posts with label Andrzej Goulding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrzej Goulding. Show all posts

Monday, April 10, 2023

Life of Pi

 Life of Pi
Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre
April 9, 2023 

Photo courtesy of Life of Pi

The Broadway production of Life of Pi is a truly mesmerizing theatrical experience.  If you’ve read the book or seen the movie, you know the story. This production takes it all to another level.  Lolita Chakrabarti’s adaptation is concise and engaging.  The illusions are spectacular.  The puppetry design by Nick Barnes and Finn Caldwell is inventive and precise.  The video design and animation by Andrzej Goulding combine with Tim Lutkin’s lighting and Carolyn Downing’s sound design to give the story dimension and life.  The cast and puppeteers are phenomenal, fully in sync and consistently unified. Director Max Webster pulls it all together to tell this tale of survival, faith, and persistence in the most remarkable way possible. 

Pi (played by Hiran Abeysekera) is the single survivor of a cargo ship that sunk on its way from India to Canada.  After over two hundred days in a life boat, he washes up on a beach in Mexico.  While recovering in a hospital, he is interviewed by Mr. Okamoto (played by Daisuke Tsuji), a representative from the shipping line, and Lulu Chen (played by Kristin Louie), the Canadian Ambassador to Mexico.  They need to document the facts surrounding the ship’s sinking.  Pi begins his story in India, where his family owned a zoo.  Due to diminishing attendance, Pi’s father (played by Rajesh Bose) purchases a Bengal Tiger to hopefully bring in the crowds.  To demonstrate how dangerous the tiger is, Pi’s Father feeds him a goat.  Pi witnesses the tiger kill and devour the goat.  The lesson is learned.  Pi fully understands.  

Photo courtesy of Life of Pi

When Pi’s family decides to emigrate to Canada to escape the political unrest in India, they take the animals with them on a cargo ship.  When the ship sinks during a storm, Pi finds himself on a life boat in the middle of the ocean with an orangutan, a hyena, a zebra with a broken leg, and the Bengal Tiger.

Hiram Abeysekera portrays Pi as an impressive and ambitious seventeen year old.  His life in India is, as he says, “idyllic.”  He is educated, logical, and passionate.  He is eager and open to experiencing all the world has to offer.  Mr. Abeysekera enacts every detail of Pi’s story with agility, clarity, and precision.  He questions and explores.  He skillfully pulls back to draw the audience in, then freely opens up to relieve the tension.  He delivers a truly inspired performance.  The audience follows him, cares for him, and feels with him.     

Photo courtesy of Life of Pi

Every moment of spectacle in this production serves the telling of the story.  The audience is transported to a dangerous and mystical world.  

Don’t miss Life of Pi.  Get your ticket today!

Domenick Danza

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Man to Man

Man to Man
Brooklyn Academy of Music
2017 Next Wave Festival
BAM Fisher (Fishman Space)
November 11, 2017

Photo courtesy of BAM 2017 Next Wave Festival
Man to Man is a one character play presented by Brooklyn Academy of Music as part of the 2017 Next Wave Festival.  This German work, written by Manfred Karge, has been translated into English by Alexandra Wood.  Based on a true story, the play begins before the rise of the Nazi Party and ends after the fall of the Berlin Wall.  Directed by Bruce Guthrie and Scott Graham, the production originated at the Wales Millennium Centre in 2015, transferred to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, and now can boast a sold out run at Brooklyn Academy of Music.

Photo courtesy of BAM 2017 Next Wave Festival
Following the death of her husband, Ella (played by Maggie Bain) takes on his identity in order to earn a living as a crane operator.  She buries him with her own name on his headstone, and takes his job as a crane operator.  She is torn between her desire to become a mother and her need to survive independently.  With the outbreak of the war it becomes difficult to go undiscovered, so she joins the Nazi army.  After the war, she continues to live secretly as a man, yearning to connect to her true self.

Maggie Bain is remarkable in this powerful piece of theatre.  Her physical strength, dexterity, and intensity are captivating.  She climbs the walls of the set, suspends herself from the ceiling, and creates tender moments of deep, personal longing.  Her vocal skill shows great range as she portrays numerous characters who come in contact with Ella on her journey. 

Photo courtesy of MAN 2017 Next Wave Festival
The video design (by Andrzej Goulding) and lighting (by Rick Fisher) are  mesmerizing.  The shadows cast on the walls by the actor transform into images of people in Ella’s story as well as her private desires.  They blend synchronistical and give a clear understanding of the main character’s loneliness and isolation.  

Man to Man is a unique and moving experience.  Unfortunately, this production ran at BAM’s Next Wave Festival for a very limited (November 7 – 11).  Keep your eyes peeled for video showings or additional bookings.  

Domenick Danza