Sitting
in the audience of The Room Sings, I
am constantly questioning the sanity of what I see, even though I am at La
MaMa, the legendary experimental theater where the traditional theater is
historically challenged. But I guess this is an appropriate reaction for the
musical in which The Room is the main character.
photo by Suzanne Opton
Ellen
Maddow, cofounder of The Talking Band and the composer of The Room Sings, plays the lead. Dressed in a classy suit (costumes
by KiKi Smith), the layering of which resembles crumbled old wallpaper, The
Room introduces us to the inhabitants of the house over the past 70 years.
Paul
Zimet, the writer and director of The
Room Sings, succeeded at assembling quirky and unexpected characters. The
only obvious connection between them is the house in the woods that they all
inhabited at some point in time. But Zimet bends the time line and modifies the
space by rotating multiple units of the set designed by Nic Ularu.
In
the head spinning kaleidoscope we see: two old siblings (Tina Shepard and Jack
Wetherall) at each other’s throats in 1943; the duo of teenage Oscar (Luka
Kain) and an old Chinese man, Mr. Ma, coping with their losses, fears and each
other; a love triangle of two brothers, Al (Joe Roseto) and Sal (Andrew Weems),
and Loretta (Theresa Mccarthy) writing an opera at their hunting lodge in 1987;
a married couple, Hope (Abigail Ramsey) and Sidney (Will Budgett), and Hope’s
widowed father William (James Himelsbach) selling the house in 2015. Every
drama is accompanied by it’s own unique soundtrack coming out of the transistor
radio, mostly distracting and unnecessary.
The worlds
of spirits and animals, such as porcupines, skunks and beavers, all have their
share of the property and are at constant war with the human tenants. The video
projections by Baxter Engle feature mostly peaceful landscapes contrasting with
the fears and cruelties of the human nature ruling inside the house.
The Room Sings while having some major
flaws, nevertheless, has its divine moments. We forgive Ellen Maddow her dull singing voice, trying to catch up
in energy and speed with the recording, for the touching absurdist poetry of
Zimet’s songs. We forgive week acting for the masterful puppetry, designed by
Ralph Lee.
As the
beavers from the puppet opera say, the humans are difficult to grasp at times, especially
if the room tells the story.
The Room Sings produced by The Talking
Band runs through April 16th
at the La MaMa’s Ellen Stewart Theatre located on 66 E 4th Street.
Shows are Wednesday to Saturday at 7pm, Saturday matinee at 2pm, Sunday at 4pm.
Tickets are $30 for adults, $20 for students and seniors, and a limited amount at
$10 is available. Run time is 75 minutes with no intermission.
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