Maybe it's too nice?
A visual radio play after Richard Dresser's Below the Belt
Maybe it's too nice? - A visual radio play (2004) was a production by Tore Vagn Lid/Transiteatret-Bergen. Maybe it's too nice? was based on Richard Dresser's Below the Belt, produced in 2004.
Maybe it's too nice? was an absurd satire about life in the golden age of neoliberalism and carried strong criticism against language and society. It was about maintaining one's identity in a globalised and free-floating work structure. The production had a stylised, physical and rhythmical expression giving music a central place.
Information
(Objekt ID 1756)Object type | Production |
Premiere | April 21, 2004 |
Produced by | Tore Vagn Lid/Transiteatret Bergen |
In collaboration with | The National Stage, Bergen Center for Electronic Arts |
Based on | Below the Belt by Richard Dresser |
Audience | Adults |
Language | Norwegian |
Keywords | Theatre, Musical theatre, Audio Theatre, Satire, Political Theatre, Theatre of the absurd |
Running period | April 21, 2004 — June 18, 2007 |
Website | Transiteatret-Bergen |
Requirements to venue
Blackout | Yes |
In the essay Maybe it’s too nice? - A visual radio play, subtitled Scenic reflections over a frozen flexibility, Tore Vagn Lid writes the following:
"'What is truth?' said jesting Pilate, and would not stay for an answer. (J.L Austin)
Where Pontius Pilate was free to go, the characters of Maybe it’s too nice stand stuck in a new work marked (and a new economy's) wide open and thoroughly flexible office landscapes. No walls, no doors, no regular places, everything is flexible and everything can be allocated - including the truth. As a scenic anthropologic field study the performance is seeking to approach this 'new'. Not as a reflection or a mirror, but as scenic contemplation over a sad subject.
'Dresser as a visual radio play'
As material for what I have called a visual radio play lays American Richard Dressler's little drama from 1995, Below the Belt. What has fascinated me for long about Dressler's comedy was (and is) the text's potential as a 'seismograph', an instrument to warn about something yet to come; a weak stirring, barely to be heard (and thus, free to feed itself and grow) through the self-satisfied irony of Norway in the 1990es until it today has become more or less a political power practice.
But at the same time Maybe it's too nice is a dialogic counterpart to Dressler's text, a scenic attempt to test the traditional dramatic fable. Through the experiment with what I have called a visual radio play, the performance tries to absolve the language from Dressler's (strategic) individuals and make the language a main character in a space without real actors: The three performers on stage are neither victims nor executioners, but at the same time they are (or are forced to be?) both. Hell is no longer (as Sartre said) 'the others'. Hell is in - or is - the language itself.
The labour camp and the forced labour's iron grating have been transformed into new shapes, becoming sentence melodies and linguistic formulas in a corporate economic vocabulary transcending steadily new national and private/intimate spheres. The magic circle of efficiency-improvement, allocation and flexibility hardens the itineraries of flight, because the superstructure of privatisation also has privatised the private spaces. For the thoroughly flexible personality (also the stage personalities as such) such a situation can bring forth a particular form of agoraphobia - a claustrophobic subconsciousness in the middle of the limitless economy's wide open force field.
Because of this, in the visual radio play the dialogue is less original than it is social: The text is stolen from the men of Dressler's drama to be part of a relay between stage and movie screen, between theatre and reality TV and between male and female protagonists. A sentence (or a strategy) started by one role figure onstage can be fulfilled by a female supporting actor in the reality bunker. This way we try to open the stage room for a movement having long ago claimed its place outside of it: In the golden age of neoliberalism the borders between one's work place and the new TV entertainment are fluid, the battle zone is expanded and has become a self-enforcing way of entertainment. Also in reality TV's houses made of concrete, tempting islands and demanding farms the demand for flexibility has become absolute: Nothing is work and everything is work, the way everything and nothing can be economic calculations, from the friendly gesture to the strategic act of intercourse.
In the age of individualism, short-term contracts, efficiency-improvement and everybody's battle against everybody else, doubt, insecurity and fear are paradoxically among the few things we all seem to have in common. When one can no longer speak, because every word and every little quote can be meant as, or become regarded as, a strategic calculation - then one sings (or at least onstage makes an attempt at singing) - sadly and polyphonic. As a second material for the performance I have matched Dressler's text evenly with different musical arrangements. Musical quotes are sided with quotes from the theatre space's own near and old history, modernism vs. post-modernism, and vice versa, because already a long time has passed since the absolved history went from knowledge to weapon - long ago being laid-back became yet another belittling technique. In G. F. Händel's minor-scaled baroque variations and in Jim Diamond's sentimental (and almost forgotten) hits from the 1980es, a sad undertone sounds about something that maybe has been - was - or could have been - different."
Sources:
Black Box Theatres archive. Season program the autumn of 2005. Donated by Black Box Theatre. 21.11.2013.
Transiteatret-Bergen, transiteatret.com, 01.08.2010, http://www.transiteatret.com/maybe.html
Name | Role |
---|---|
Richard Dresser | – Author |
Tore Vagn Lid | – Translation |
Tore Vagn Lid | – Concept/Idea |
Tore Vagn Lid | – Direction |
Marte Johanne Ekhougen | – Stage design |
Marte Johanne Ekhougen | – Costume design |
Simen Grankel | – Video/Film |
Tore Vagn Lid | – Musical arrangement |
Tore Vagn Lid | – Sound design |
Thorolf Thuestad | – Sound design |
Tore Vagn Lid | – Lighting design |
Harald Midthun | – Lighting design |
Tor Christian Faugstad Bleikli | – Actor |
Ingvild Hellesøy | – Actor |
Elisabeth Lahr | – Actor |
Vidar Magnussen | – Actor |
Arild Vestre | – Actor |
Thorolf Thuestad | – Sound technician |
Harald Midthun | – Lighting technician |
Rune Andreassen | – Production assistant |
Kyrre Bjørkås | – Production assistant |
Trine Thom Moe | – Assistant |
June 18, 2007 – Friteatret, Grenland Friteater | Show |
2006 – Teatersalen, Førdehuset, Teater Vestland | Show |
September 9, 2005 – Store scene Black Box Teater (Marstrandgata) | Show |
September 8, 2005 – Store scene Black Box Teater (Marstrandgata) | Show |
September 7, 2005 – Store scene Black Box Teater (Marstrandgata) | Show |
January 30, 2005 – Teaterhuset Avant Garden | Show |
January 29, 2005 – Teaterhuset Avant Garden | Show |
April 24, 2004 – Studio Bergen, Carte Blanche | Show |
April 23, 2004 – Studio Bergen, Carte Blanche | Show |
April 22, 2004 – Studio Bergen, Carte Blanche | Show |
April 21, 2004 – Studio Bergen, Carte Blanche | Opening night |
Jan H. Landro (2004, 22.04). Bergens Tidende [Bergen, Norway]:
" Tore Vagn Lid has made Richard Dressler's absurd satire about keeping one's self and self-respect in a world where the work and one's boss rules most things, if possible even more threatening and pessimistic. [...] Interaction so tight and concentrated there are sparks. [...] Transiteatret balances, solid as a mountain, on the knife-blade the company has sharpened for itself."
Andreas Wiese, date unknown, Dagbladet [Oslo]:
"Director Tore Vagn Lid has delivered a holistic, intelligent work that is impressive."