237.
THE ARCHITECTURE OF BECOMING
The
press release for this multi-authored, multi-directed Women’s Project Theatre piece
at City Center reads: “The 15 hottest theater artists in NYC bring you this
evocative theatrical tapestry. A lost postcard, the ghost of an opera diva and
the siren call of the City. Erupting from the shadows of New York City Center,
expect history and mystery in this world premiere production.” For many, this
is likely to be the clearest explanation of the weirdly static, often
incomprehensible, and dramatically baffling exercise titled THE ARCHITECTURE OF
BECOMING. The writers are Kara Lee Corthron, Sarah Gancher, Virginia Grise,
Dipika Guha, and Lauren Yee. Elean Araoz, Lydia Fort, and Lauren Keating are
the directors. I count six producers and six actors (Claudia Acosta, Danielle
Skraastad, Jon Norman Schneider, Christopher Livingston, and Vanessa Kai), so
I’m not sure how the total of 15 is arrived at, but then again, I’m not sure
about anything else concerning this too-many-cooks-spoil-the-broth concoction,
and I don’t really care that much.
Danielle Skraastad. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
Jon Norman Schneider, Claudia Acosta. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
All I could think of while watching
it were the words of Emperor Hirohito in his famous broadcast following Japan’s
defeat in World War II when he asked the Japanese people to be ready for
“enduring the unendurable and suffering what is unsufferable [sic].” As I looked around the theatre
from my seat at one side of the three-quarters round setting, I saw a number of
people following the emperor’s advice by resorting to 40 winks.
Christopher Livingston, Vanessa Kai, Danielle Skraastad. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
If you think that this production is
going to be a dramatized history of the New York City Center, the huge,
neo-Moorish performing arts complex on W. 55th Street (opened
in1924), in the bowels of which (Stage II) it’s being shown, you’ll be about
10% correct, as there’s enough historical information embedded in the text to
warrant such an assessment. (Read the Wikipedia article on it if you want the
other 90%.) Most of it, however, is so overlaid with peculiar and extraneous
stories about Asian, gay (male and female), and black characters peripherally
related to the building over the course of its history, that you quickly forget
the theatre and struggle to puzzle out who these people are and what they mean.
Christopher Livingston, Vanessa Kai. Photo: Carol Rosegg.
The
premise is that a Hispanic writer from Texas named Siempre Norteada (Claudia Acosta) wants to
write something about the City Center; a bizarre woman with oversize hips, the
Grande Dame (Danielle Skraastad), wearing a costume seemingly composed of
Moorish elements lifted from the theatre’s architecture, magically appears.
Speaking in a New York accent and tone not unlike Mae West’s, she opens the
upstage doors on designer Justin Townsend’s spare stage to introduce characters
and stories that will inspire the writer.
Aside
from a few moments of potentially interesting theatricality, and extensive sequences from the old silent movie, THE SHEIK, starring Rudolph Valentino, you soon give up
and either take a snooze or find some other way to endure the unendurable.