Matt Nuernberger, Dan Weschler, Ryan Melia, Curtis Gillen in The PigPen Theatre Co.'s The Old Man and the Old Moon |
The PigPen Theatre Co. has been touring around its musical fairy tale, The Old Man and the Old Moon; I missed it at Williamstown last summer but caught up with it in the ArtsEmerson series in Boston. PigPen consists of seven men who got together as freshmen drama students at Carnegie Mellon in 2007, which makes them around twenty-five. And indeed the spirit of the piece, which they devised in collaboration with their director, Stuart Carden, is undergraduate in the best sense: it feels freshly minted, and it’s devoid of even the smallest taint of cynicism or smugness.
The narrative is a shaggy-dog fable about how the
phases of the moon evolved. An old man (Ryan Melia) is tasked with filling up
the moon every night with liquid light. Then one day his wife (Alex Falberg),
stirred by a familiar piece of music she hears on the wind, sails off to follow
it, and the old man, distraught, abandons his post to try to find her. He has a
series of adventures on the way: he gets
a ride on a war ship and replaces its captain when he’s killed in battle, he
gets swallowed up by an enormous fish, and so on. Meanwhile the moon wanes and
finally fades out entirely; the nighttime sky is sunk in darkness, there’s
nothing to control the tides, and chaos ensues.
Melia, Ben Ferguson, Alex Falberg, and Nuernberger |
Much
of the delight in watching the play comes from its homemade quality, from the
way Carden, the actors and the designers – Lydia Fine on sets, costumes and
puppets, Bart Cortright on lighting, Mikhail Fiksel on sound – create
surprising effects from combinations or permutations of common, familiar
images. No prop master is listed in the program, but I especially loved a dog
made of mops, a mast for a boat that looks like it began as an oddly large
windshield scraper, and a goose that looks like an outsize red sock with a
saucepot inside with a pair of wire cutters for a beak. The shifts are so fast that they add
extra punch to the performance; that boat comes together in a single beat. This
is the most playful variety of poor theatre. Aspiring young actors who see it must
emerge full of hope, their faith in their chosen career affirmed.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movie.
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