White Noise
The Fridge Art Gallery, DC, June 2012
Kennedy Center (Page to Stage Festival), DC, September 2010
Amnesty International Human Rights art Festival, MD, April 2010
(this play has been renamed: "Twister: It Happened in Detroit")
Tim, an African American painter, has developed a “ministry of the arts” by basing his work on spiritual masters of the past. He has been brought to Detroit to exhibit his work in a church gallery. The church is having financial problems, however, and it was unclear that they would be able to pay his way, so they accessed monies from Northrup-Grumman, where Dick, the chairman of the Church Arts Board, once worked. Tim is astounded to learn that his trip is being underwritten by a munitions maker.
Immediately after learning this information, however, he finds out that his hostess Sally – where he will stay for the weekend while in Detroit – was raped two years ago. Lilac, one of the art committee leaders, keeps insisting that the rapist was black, but she is continually corrected by those around her: he was a white man of Swedish extraction. Joan, another hostess, who is in charge of shepherding Tim through his time in Detroit, is a highly-sexed 50-something woman, who conflates sex and mystical realization. Tim, who is at first mature and helpful, slowly finds all of the sexual energy breaking through his calm spiritual veneer, and assaulting him with his own sexual anxieties and spiritual uncertainties.
Simone Weil – an historical figure, 20th century prophet on whose thought Tim’s art is based – shows up (a figment of Tim’s imagination) in scanty clothes to mock and tease Tim. Dick and Lilac, 70-something leaders of the church community, reappear onstage with Joan and Tim (though not interacting with them), and all four have a strange, four-way conversation about sex, desire and spirituality.
Finally, the last scene takes place deep in the night at Sally’s house, when neither Sally nor Tim can sleep. Their interaction quickly heads into the surreal, where it is not exactly clear what part of the action is taking place between the two, and what solely in Tim’s head. Simone reappears and is apperceived by Sally, who finds the apparition fascinating. After Simone exits, Sally assumes the role of Tim’s mentor/tormentor. Finally, Tim can take it no more and exits to the bathroom, where he finds dubious consolation alone, somewhere between a “faith in faith” and the lost.Tim, an African American painter, has developed a “ministry of the arts” by basing his work on spiritual masters of the past. He has been brought to Detroit to exhibit his work in a church gallery. The church is having financial problems, however, and it was unclear that they would be able to pay his way, so they accessed monies from Northrup-Grumman, where Dick, the chairman of the Church Arts Board, once worked. Tim is astounded to learn that his trip is being underwritten by a munitions maker.
Immediately after learning this information, however, he finds out that his hostess Sally – where he will stay for the weekend while in Detroit – was raped two years ago. Lilac, one of the art committee leaders, keeps insisting that the rapist was black, but she is continually corrected by those around her: he was a white man of Swedish extraction. Joan, another hostess, who is in charge of shepherding Tim through his time in Detroit, is a highly-sexed 50-something woman, who conflates sex and mystical realization. Tim, who is at first mature and helpful, slowly finds all of the sexual energy breaking through his calm spiritual veneer, and assaulting him with his own sexual anxieties and spiritual uncertainties.
Simone Weil – an historical figure, 20th century prophet on whose thought Tim’s art is based – shows up (a figment of Tim’s imagination) in scanty clothes to mock and tease Tim. Dick and Lilac, 70-something leaders of the church community, reappear onstage with Joan and Tim (though not interacting with them), and all four have a strange, four-way conversation about sex, desire and spirituality.
Finally, the last scene takes place deep in the night at Sally’s house, when neither Sally nor Tim can sleep. Their interaction quickly heads into the surreal, where it is not exactly clear what part of the action is taking place between the two, and what solely in Tim’s head. Simone reappears and is apperceived by Sally, who finds the apparition fascinating. After Simone exits, Sally assumes the role of Tim’s mentor/tormentor. Finally, Tim can take it no more and exits to the bathroom, where he finds dubious consolation alone, somewhere between a “faith in faith” and the lost.
Cast
Jeff Kirkman (Tim)
Josh Canary (Dick)
Karen V. Lawrence (Lilac)
Tina Thomas (Sally)
Gigi Buscaglio (Joan)
Lauren Kieler (Simone Weil)
Desiree Miller (Cellist)
Crew
Roselie Vazquez-Yetter (Director)
Sam Basa (Stage Manager)
Review
”The production is a fascinating peek at the side most artists don’t want us to see: the creation (and deconstruction) of the persona . . . a fascinating and rewarding look at the multiple dimensions of faith, theory, and inspiration that go into Block’s work.”
Jon Barry, DC Theatre Scene