The Apple family is silenced by pain but not zoomed



[ad_1]

From Richard Nelson What do we need to talk about?
Photo: Courtesy of The Public

You can’t keep the theater low for long. In fact, you can’t keep it low for a minute. Even if you tear off all of their final parts, the playwrights just … adjust. Just six weeks after closing, a typical rehearsal period, as you will notice, the Public Theater is ready with a play devised for broadcast by Richard Nelson, rehearsed and produced at Zoom. In the old days, I tended to be a bit simplistic about what constitutes “theater.” I like a big top, so I thought that anything (dance, storytelling, drama) that happened in a theater counted. But now even that expansive definition seems insignificant. What do we need to talk about? It was made for and with screens, but still totally tastes of theater. Maybe it’s the main notes of the language, or the length of engagement between the cast, or the way the audience’s own imagination is a crucial player? I am trying to place it.

Nelson is best known for his two cycles in the audience: the four Apple family plays and the Gabriels trilogy, and with movement What do we need to talk about? he adds a fifth drama to the first. Since the apples mainly sat and talked That Hopey Changey thing, sweet and sad, sorry, and Regular singing, It feels like a horizontal slide to add a playset to a family video conference. We may have last seen the middle-aged siblings in 2014, but they are all adrift on and off the ‘stage’, stepping out of their chairs for drinks; still growling about the changing city of Rhinebeck, discussing art and loss and big trouble. Nelson’s murmurcore approach (he always has microphones hanging low over his sets, so his actors don’t have to project) translates well into the intimate aesthetic of a Zoom call. Through every little laptop lens we even see some characters plus clearly. You can learn a lot about each sister by noticing who uses their Airpods to maintain a consistent and reliable tone, and who trusts the computer’s microphone, which triggers when it tilts and completely fades when it turns its head.

[ad_2]