Prepare to get suspended in a null-gravity state for an hour
and a half. Ski End, produced by
Piehole and directed by Tara Ahmadinejad, starts as a slow, meditative emersion
into the collective fantasy of what it is to run a ski shop in a small town in
Vermont, played out by five 30-something city kids. As they find themselves
trapped in the actual abandoned ski store, they start exploring the narration
possibilities, building up the play inside the play, and using the equipment
that survived the flood.
photo by Matthew Dunivan
The puddle in the middle becomes a lake, a clothing rack
becomes a bus stop, and a model of the ski ramp becomes a mountain. The space,
however seems to be just a part of the chamber of rooms, going “way-way back”.
The set, designed by Alexandra Panzer, has a back wall, which doesn’t reach the
floor so whoever appears from behind it, is first introduced by their legs. This
is in fact how we meet the five visitors, just looking at their legs walking
“on the other side” and listening to their recorded voices.
It is just to say that we meet the room first, which seems to
have a mind of it’s own. As the city kids, still standing behind the wall,
fiddle with the switches and buttons, the lights go on and off, objects move
and clouds of smoke appear visible to just us, the audience. The room even has
it’s “servant”, a real estate agent (Alexandra Panzer) dressed in 80s attire by
Olivia Gibian. She could be easily mistaken for a ghost, or may be she is one?
Everything seems ephemeral in the Ski End. The narration slips away the moment you think you figured
out what’s going on and the space appears to have no defined borders. The
Projection by Matt Romein kicks in at some pint, expanding the space to some
king of digital “mirror-world” to which our characters escape for a minute from
time to time. Occasionally the cast bursts into a beautiful a cappella chant or
starts a ballet on skies.
The actors move and talk just a little bit slower than one
would in real life, which is much slower than it’s normally seen in the
theatre. The shifting of roles and improvisational turns is rather fast. It
seems to be using the principal of free association, revolving around skiing,
running a small business in the age of online stores, climate change and other
topics. Even when the other inhabitants of the ski store break in from the outside
world, the play only gets “realistic” for a brief moment. The final spiral of Ski End shoots you right into space,
where you float in the dark above the 17-year-olds’ fears and hopes.
__________
Ski End plays at New
Ohio Theatre, located at 154 Christopher Street, through May 19th. Running time
is 95 minutes, no intermission. Performances are Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays,
Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30pm with an added show on Wednesday, 5/17 at
7:30pm. Tickets are $25 and can be purchased at NewOhioTheatre.org or by calling 212-352-
3101. $20 student tickets are available. For info visit NewOhioTheatre.org.
Ski End is written
by Piehole and directed by Tara Ahmadinejad. The production team includes
Alexandra Panzer (Scenic Design), Oona Curley (Lighting Design), Joey Wolfslau
(Sound Design), Olivia Gibian (Costume Design), Matt Romein (Projection
Design), Deepali Gupta (Songwriter), Ann Barkin (Production Stage Manager),
Skylar Fox (Technical Director/Production Manager), Elliot B. Quick
(Producer/Dramaturg), Bailey Williams (Producer) and Lauren Whitehead
(Dramaturg).
The cast is Toni Ann DeNoble, Allison LaPlatney, Alexandra
Panzer, Emilie Soffe, Ben Vigus, Jeff Wood, Kijani-Ali Gaulman, Maite Martin
and Nicole Suazo.
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