The City Garage latest show Phoebe Zeitgeist Returns to Earth is another complex piece of dream theatre by Charles Duncombe. This marks the second of his plays I've seen.
Conceived as a sequel the play Blood on the Cat's Neck by German playwright/film director Rainer Werner Fassbender, this work focuses on an alien Artificial Intelligence looking to issue a report on the inhabitants of this planet. She lands in the city of Los Angeles during a Presidential election! What a lovely opportunity to see humanity at its most raw and honest!
Or is it?
Credit: Paul Rubenstein |
Phoebe (Megan Kim) arrives and almost instantly begins encountering others, starting with the Cop (Zack Sayendo) who notes she shouldn't walk around naked like that. Yet he offers to look the other way in return for sexual favors. Phoebe has zero notion what he means and never does learn English. Along the way she meets a Garbageman (Bo Roberts) who yearns for yesterday he remembers as better than today. Later a suave Gigolo (Andrew Loviska) makes his profession sound almost kindly, countered by a Homeless Vet (Anthony Sannazarro) who can no longer function in the civilian world. A English Professor (Trace Taylor) who comes on to Phoebe in a genteel sort of way, a ruthless Foster Mother (Mardaweh Tempo) who insists this is a hard life and if taking care/ignoring a bunch of orphans gets her some income, then great!
Credit: Paul Rubenstein |
Part of the whole feel of this play, and in keeping with Fassbender, is how this last character increasingly seems like the least effectual of the lot--which is startling high bar.
Credit: Paul Rubenstein |
Not so everyone else.
Fassbender's world view (at least as seen in the plays I've seen) was unrelentingly dark. This play mirror or echoes that, every single character seems to devolve into a worse version of the person we initially meet--or, as is implied, they become more purely themselves. Eventually everyone is on stage and begins arguing about the election, then everything involved in it, then every detail of each others' lives. It becomes something like a mini-riot from which Phoebe emerges to give a devastating report to her far-off creators of life on planet Earth. She notes the strange four-limbed mutant parasites are doomed to naturally make themselves extinct. So, good news for the universe!
What we the audience experience is this story told with the focus of a laser beam, a dark and fierce critique of everything horrible we as a species do to one another--not in terms of nations or wars, political power or social policy, but in how we treat one another as individuals. That focus is the direct result of efforts by the cast and director Frederique Michel's successful efforts in bringing these words to (disturbing) life.
Phoebe Zeitgeist Returns to Earth plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 3pm until November 13, 2016
at City Garage, Building
T1, Bergamot
Station, 2525 Michigan Avenue, Santa Monica CA 90404.
Note: Sundays are "Pay What You Can" at the door.
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