Virtual Rebelrousing
Julia Wiseman (Narrator) Emma Wiseman (Clover / The Cat) Alaina Smith (Mollie/ Muriel) Christian Sanko (center) / (Boxer/Pilkington) Josof Ruttig (Squealer / Moses) Tyler Kirker (Snowball / Benjamin) Keon Dalziel (center) / (Major / Napoleon)
By Tom Wachunas
“…Is it not crystal clear, then, comrades, that all the evils of this life of ours spring from the tyranny of human beings?...Man serves the interests of no creature except himself…” - from the pig named Major, in his speech to the animals from Chapter 1 of Animal Farm, by George Orwell
PERFORMANCE: Theatre At Malone
University, and Malone University Department of Communication, Visual, and
Performing Arts, present ANIMAL FARM: A Fable in Two Acts,
adapted by Nelson Bond from George Orwell's classic novel, and directed by
Craig Joseph.
The production
features Malone University students Keon Dalziel, Tyler Kirker, Julia Robinson,
Josof Ruttig, Christian Sanko, Alaina Smith, and Emma Wiseman, all playing
multiple roles. ANIMAL FARM is a readers' theatre piece, adapted for the film
medium during the COVID-19 pandemic. The students' performances are
supplemented by music, sound effects, video clips, and original artwork by
artists from around the country (featured in the exhibit currently on view at
Stark Library Main Branch until December 5) to create an "illustrated
radio play" of sorts, designed for online viewing.
Remaining performance dates are Friday and
Saturday, November 20th-21st. Tickets are $5 and can be purchased at
https://AnimalFarmMalone.eventbrite.com
Once your ticket is purchased, on the day of
your selected performance, you'll receive a link at your e-mail address at
12:01 AM; this link will enable you to watch the production at any point during
that 24-hour period.
One viral casualty
of this protracted time of social distancing is the art of live theatre. With local
playhouses empty and their stages dark, where can an ardent theatre enthusiast
go? Why, to digital technology, of course – that ubiquitous deliverer of virtual
(though not always virtuous) life. Zoom is in the room, effectively making my
desktop monitor a compact stage in itself, even if it is only a flattened,
albeit inventive facsimile of 3D theatrical reality. An illusion of an illusion,
if you will.
Still, this project
nevertheless delivers a skillfully crafted portrait and an otherwise deeply probing
manifestation of the characters and their circumstances. So for the moment, you
might consider putting aside any expectations you may have of seeing a
conventional-looking stage production.
There aren’t the traditional
stage accoutrements here such as the elaborate artifice of costumes, variable
lighting, or constructed sets. That said, and with thanks to the excellent
camera work and editing by Josh Branch Productions, the incorporation of 46
artworks by various artists in the concurrent Animal Farm exhibit at
Stark Library - like so many quotation marks or exclamation points - greatly
enhances the dimensionality of the on-camera oral narrative. The proceedings
unfold in a found environment, an actual farm, bathed throughout in natural
light. It’s a bright, sunny day for a dark, satirical allegory.
The seven student actors, directed by Craig
Joseph, deliver this unusual presentation with an intense, emotive clarity that
is truly riveting from beginning to end. They’re not simply reading Orwell’s words
back to us, vivid as those words certainly are. Often looking directly into the
camera, they perform the words with earnest credibility, actualizing
them in the same way eyewitnesses to a revolution might look us in the eye as
they report what they have experienced. And interestingly enough, beyond the specific
events being described in Orwell’s narrative, the most compelling, tangible actions
in this entire production are to be found in the sharply honed authenticity
of facial expressions and mesmerizing vocal inflections from each these gifted
performers as they confidently trot, canter, and gallop through the story.
Here’s hoping that
in the not- too- distant future, we’ll see them again, electrifying our local
stages.
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