Take
a journey through a Victorian house and five love stories in this site-specific
play.
If you are into macabre romantic tales, atmospheric venues, and immersive theatre with both high production values and affordable prices, you need to book tickets for Consumption immediately. After the ten-minute walk from the subway to the Victorian house in Brooklyn’s Ditmas Park, you will find wine and stories waiting for you in the parlor at a wake for Carl Von Cosel, a German-born radiology technician...and a necrophile.
If you are into macabre romantic tales, atmospheric venues, and immersive theatre with both high production values and affordable prices, you need to book tickets for Consumption immediately. After the ten-minute walk from the subway to the Victorian house in Brooklyn’s Ditmas Park, you will find wine and stories waiting for you in the parlor at a wake for Carl Von Cosel, a German-born radiology technician...and a necrophile.
Tracy Weller and Devin Burham in Consumption. Photo by Matthew Dunivan. |
A surviving daughter (Tracy Weller),
abandoned by the deceased in her childhood, delivers a eulogy to the twenty or
so audience members cramped in a cozy sitting room that is flooded with flowers
and sympathy cards. Struggling with mixed emotions of embarrassment, disgust,
and anger, she talks about her father, who was mostly famous for living with
the corpse of Elena Hoyos, his ex-patient, for several years. Even though
details like the wax mask and vaginal tube that he crafted for the decaying
body are vividly planted in the audience’s minds, somehow there is still space
left for romance. Did I mention it is based on real events from the
1930s?
The
“doctor” and his patient dying from tuberculosis are part of Consumption too;
their story runs parallel to four other couples' journeys. Tracy Weller, who
conceived of the show, and Devin Burnam, who wrote it, play all the characters.
They are teenage friends exploring an uncharted territory of love, a married
couple from a 1950s sitcom, two detectives, and passers-by on a cruise. All
five stories are mysteriously intertwined, bound together at the core by love,
which, like a disease, strikes at random.
The
two actors swiftly transition from one story to another by changing costumes
and emerging in different rooms throughout the house, not unlike ghosts. Both
Weller and Burnam perform with incredible zest and have great chemistry,
essential for the piece. Three ushers guide the audience through the space, pop
the props into the hands of the performers, and work the lights and sound. This
almost ironic yet unobtrusive meta-theatricality suits the odd and whimsical
tone of Burnam’s writing. The only strange choice (or perhaps the lack of one)
is the candy-colored sweaters of the stagehands, unfit for the atmosphere.
Consumption is staged throughout the entire first floor
of the Beverley Social Club, including two parlors and a staircase leading
upstairs, and an enormous ballroom. (Before its current incarnation as an event
venue, the hundred-year-old building was used as a Democratic club, a
speakeasy, and a synagogue.) This spectacular location is enhanced by the
scenic design of Christopher Swader and Justin Swader. With minimal means, like
small LED panels or a single vintage spotlight (lighting by Daisy Long), the
production achieves truly dramatic effect. A tastefully done sound design helps
to transition from a cemetery on a rainy day, to the deck of a cruise ship, to
the soundstage where a TV show is being recorded.
As Consumption progresses,
it becomes more surreal and hallucination-like. From the haze of a ballroom
decorated for a wedding emerges a prom dress embroidered with red flowers
resembling bloodstains, a woman wearing a wax mask, and a half-dozen cake
toppers of perfect brides and grooms. As the five stories roll to their end,
they start leaking into each other like scenes in a fever dream. It seems like
the horrid tale of “love beyond the grave” infects everybody who comes in
contact with it, so be careful.
__________
(Consumption plays at the Beverley Social Club,
1016 Beverley Road, Brooklyn, through December 8, 2018. The running time is 90
minutes with no intermission. Performances are Wednesday through Saturday at 8.
Tickets are $25; for tickets and more information visit mason.holdings.)
Consumption is conceived
and developed by Tracy Weller and Mason Holdings, and written by Devin Burnam.
Directed by Kristjan Thor. Scenic Design by Christopher Swader and Justin
Swader. Lighting Design by Daisy Long.
The cast is Devin Burnam and
Tracy Weller.
[This review was published on theasy.com
on 11.26.18]