'Meet The Samsas' Mixes Old And New
Natalie Abreu
Issue date: 3/28/08 Section: Focus
Although television screens, reality shows, Franz Kafka's "Metamorphosis" and puppets might sound like a strange combination, the Connecticut Repertory Theater's Studio Works play "Meet the Samsas" interweaves this motley combination into a tragic yet humorous look at the Samsa family's foray into reality television.
The play, based on Kafka's novel "The Metamorphosis" about a man who transforms into "monstrous bug" and the toll it takes on him and his family, opened on Friday night and is an Original Puppet Arts Production.
"The show is set up like a reality television series, only with puppets," said Mary Gragen Rogers, the director, co-writer and video editor of the play and 3rd-year MFA candidate in puppetry. "We are using reality TV to our advantage to highlight key story elements. There are confessionals, commercials and flashbacks that inform the action on the stage. In 'Meet the Samsas,' we wanted to create a tragic comedy that would evoke laughter and sadness. A young man transforming into a bug one morning is both ridiculous and tragic."
The show is set up as a reality show that is controlled and manipulated by an omniscient director, whose commanding voice is heard but never seen. The family of four - Mr. Samsa, Mrs. Samsa, Grace and Gordon - live out their lives in a somewhat-retro nuclear family but, in reality, have their own problems and issues with the show and each other that they deal with.
The puppeteers, clad in black, hunch over the small-scale set to bring the small, wooden marionette puppets to life.
"Moving with incredible grace, the performers are able to manipulate the marionettes as well as act," said Gragen Rogers. "The movement vocabulary and stylized human caricatures converge with the text. The term 'Kafkaesque' has come to be synonymous with small anonymous individuals trapped in an existential nightmare from which there is no escape or awakening. Not only are the puppets trapped in this world, but so are the puppeteers."
The play, based on Kafka's novel "The Metamorphosis" about a man who transforms into "monstrous bug" and the toll it takes on him and his family, opened on Friday night and is an Original Puppet Arts Production.
"The show is set up like a reality television series, only with puppets," said Mary Gragen Rogers, the director, co-writer and video editor of the play and 3rd-year MFA candidate in puppetry. "We are using reality TV to our advantage to highlight key story elements. There are confessionals, commercials and flashbacks that inform the action on the stage. In 'Meet the Samsas,' we wanted to create a tragic comedy that would evoke laughter and sadness. A young man transforming into a bug one morning is both ridiculous and tragic."
The show is set up as a reality show that is controlled and manipulated by an omniscient director, whose commanding voice is heard but never seen. The family of four - Mr. Samsa, Mrs. Samsa, Grace and Gordon - live out their lives in a somewhat-retro nuclear family but, in reality, have their own problems and issues with the show and each other that they deal with.
The puppeteers, clad in black, hunch over the small-scale set to bring the small, wooden marionette puppets to life.
"Moving with incredible grace, the performers are able to manipulate the marionettes as well as act," said Gragen Rogers. "The movement vocabulary and stylized human caricatures converge with the text. The term 'Kafkaesque' has come to be synonymous with small anonymous individuals trapped in an existential nightmare from which there is no escape or awakening. Not only are the puppets trapped in this world, but so are the puppeteers."
2008 Woodie Awards
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