Live theatre enjoys one enormous advantage over
film or television – it stretches an audience’s imagination. Instead of special effects or a meticulously
recreating of facts, theatre depends on us engaging our mind’s eye. Juarez:A Documentary Mythology demonstrates this with great power. Power to move, to see what in fact is not at
all there, to feel at home somewhere we ourselves have never been.
I myself have never been to Juarez, Mexico. Yeah when reminded I remember hearing it
called “Murder Capital of the World” and maybe way back in the 1980s I might
have spotted it while hugging the Rio Grande en route to California.
Maybe.
But this show, with an ensemble not so much
telling the story of what happened to this small city as invoking it, made me
feel as if Juarez were somehow my home. During
the course of simply (or not so simply) relating how a wide variety of citizens
there experienced it, in their own words, the audience became part of that
history. Not in terms of blame (although
there’s plenty of that to go around).
Neither in terms of heroism (ditto).
But the raw experience of a trauma I for one hope never ever to feel in
real life. Just as a medieval passion
play sought to recreate the Passion of various Saints, so too does this
performance. We endure a martyrdom of
sorts, together, sharing in a horror which in truth wasn’t physically present
at all. We become the people of Juarez,
not in flesh or history but in our hearts.
Photo credit: Kayla Asbell |
Director
Rubén Polendo,
who also conceived this project, provides an entry into his home town which
changed so vastly after he left to attend University in the United States. As explained in a recorded voice-over, he
sought to re-acquaint himself with Juarez.
The company of actors -- Kayla Asbell, Denis Butkus, Adam Cochran, Justin Nestor, Attilio Rigotti and Corey Sullivan – ended up using a
thousand theatrical tricks to throw the focus away from themselves and back on
the stories to be told. Horror stories
of normal people swept up in events sometimes baffling, sometimes
easy-to-understand, always beyond individual control.
Maybe there lies why this dazzling display
ends up so emotionally compelling.
Vampires and zombies make for safe terrors. Not so drug cartels, random violence, police
corruption and ruthless apathy. We know
those monsters to be real.
Juarez:
A Documentary Mythology plays
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 3pm through November 13,
2016, at the Los Angeles Theatre Center, 514 South Spring Street, Los Angeles
CA 90013.
No comments:
Post a Comment