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  4:48 psychosis
  by Sarah Kane
August 29 - September 7, 2008
  directed by Natalie Novacek
The Soap Factory, Minneapolis
 
 
CAST
Id - Shira Levenson
Ego - Danielle Siver
Superego - Mickalace Wright

ARTISTIC TEAM
Stage Manager - Katrina Johnston
AD/ASM - Emilia Aghamirzai
Set Design - Natalie Novacek
Lighting Design - Ariel Pinkerton
Costume Design - Laura Leffler-McCabe
Sound Design - Brenna Deegan
Video Design - Paulina Jurzec
Publicity / Box Office - Claire Avitabile
 
Shira Levenson, Danielle Siver, and Mickalace Wright named as an
Outstanding Ensemble in Lavender's 2008 Year in Review!

 

4:48 PSYCHOSIS

Review - The Star Tribune - 9.2.08

The back story makes "4:48 Psychosis" a compelling theatrical document. Playwright Sarah Kane, wrestling with the black dog of depression, etched her script as a poem without character names or stage directions. It is clear that these were the words of a person spiraling into a suicidal hole from which she would not recover. And in fact, Kane had taken her life by the time the play was first produced.

As compelling as that context is, "4:48" sets a high bar for performance. A winning production requires firm purpose and a clear-eyed grasp of how Kane's profane and scalding play will translate into humanity when channeled through an actor. Director Natalie Novacek has taken a stab at it for 20% Theatre Company. Her staging at the Soap Factory in Minneapolis guides three actors through a largely metaphoric and psychological exercise that rarely swirls with the chaos of sadness. Held at arm's length, the show exists primarily as information with little transformative power on the viewer.

Novacek imagines her three principals as id, ego and super ego. The battle is thus interior and we see these elements vying for attention: the childish desires, the rational cool of reason and the passion of dreams. Throughout all the musing, the playwright's words drip with self-loathing.

"Do you think it's possible to be born in the wrong body?" she asks in a poignant moment of self-awareness. "I have no desire for death. No suicide ever has."

It's loaded dialogue, but by confining the action within the psyche, Novacek and her actors settle for abstract proclamation, rather than a sense of real, breathing flesh. Occasionally, a physical flurry will break the clinical recitation but it's too easy to maintain an emotional distance -- always the bane of high-concept art. Could you put these words into the mouths of actual people? Can you create character from this difficult script? Granted, it is not easy, but that's the rugged route Kane requires. Otherwise, we have words on a page to be mused upon in the head. And you needn't go to the theater to do that.

Graydon Royce


08.29.08


Lavender Magazine - On the Townsend

by John Townsend

Psychosis 4:48 (Also known as, 4:48 Psychosis)
Through Sept. 7
The Soap Factory
110 5th Ave. S., Mpls.
(612) 227-1188
www.tctwentypercent.org

On the heels of its wonderful staging of the terrific trans play Standards of Care, bold and smart 20% Theatre Company plumbs the surreal Psychosis 4:48, Sarah Kane’s descent into psychological hell. But how is the troupe approaching this, the playwright’s last work, after which she committed suicide?

Director Natalie Novacek stresses how crucial it is for the actors not to fall “into the trap of playing everything at one level or one emotion. There is so much depth, sincerity, fear, anger, sadness—and, yes, humor—in her depiction of mental illness and depression. It is my goal to explore all those emotions to varying degrees and intensities. It can be difficult for the actors to be so close to something so powerful. We take a lot of breaks in rehearsals. We laugh a lot, talk a lot. We are very cognizant of what this show does to all of us mentally, physically, and emotionally. We try to look out for each other, keep each other healthy and safe.”

   
 
This activity was made possible, in part, by funds provided by the Metropolitan
Regional Arts Council through an appropriation by the Minnesota Legislature.

Last Updated October 5, 2009
20% Theatre Company Twin Cities
5152 Aldrich Avenue North | Minneapolis, MN 55430 | info@tctwentypercent.org | 612.227.1188