Postcard from New York [2]
Then She Fell, Fun Home, Neue Gallerie, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, The Tempest
New York, New York, it’s a helluva town – as the words of
the song originally went, before the Production Code intervened and changed
them to ‘it’s a wonderful town’ for the sanitized film version. The original
words are more biting, though, and more ambivalent.
New York, New York, it’s a helluva town.
The Bronx is up, but the Battery's down.
The people ride in a hole in the groun'.
New York, New York, it's a helluva town!
New York, New York, it’s a visitor's place,
Where no one lives on account of the pace,
But seven millions are screaming for space.
New York, New York, it's a visitor's place!
New York,
New York: wonderful town, helluva town; the setting for some of the most exciting
theatrical experiences on my Fellowship travels, and the scene of my undoing.
It’s been just over a month since I left there, and it’s going to be harder
than ever to separate the strands of my cultural and personal life in what
follows.
*
I didn’t
get much sleep on the night train from Chicago. I hadn’t forked out for a sleeper,
so I tilted back my chair and dozed as best I could as the Lake Shore Limited
plunged on through the flickering darkness across Indiana and Ohio, slowing as
it passed through the fading lights of Cleveland around dawn. The scenery the
next day was spectacular, even through bleary eyes – especially once we reached
New York State, the Catskills and the plunging shores of the Hudson between
Albany and New York City.
I arrived
at my Airbnb in the achingly hip district of Williamsburg just across the
bridge from the Lower East Side to discover that no one was home to let me in.
Fortunately a helpful tenant downstairs let me through to the back yard where I
managed to do something I’d only seen in movies and scale the fire escape (quietly
congratulating myself on my last two weeks of body-mind training in
Minneapolis), and was lucky enough to find an unlocked window to the apartment,
which was on the third floor. It turned out I was sharing it with two young
guys from Long Island, a law student and an IT consultant, who both had work
placements in NYC over the summer. They were as surprised as I was when they
got home from the gym and found an intruder in their apartment, as our elusive
host (who lived in Paris) hadn’t informed them I was coming. It was definitely
the most random Airbnb experience I’d had so far, but I took it all in my stride
and settled in, despite the chaos, the heat, the absence of aircon and my tiny
room. I was in New York, after all.
*
I was here
for two weeks’ down-time from the training and workshop activities at the core
of my Fellowship travels. I planned to see some theatre, have a couple of
meetings, and do some writing of my own.
The night after
my arrival I went to an immersive/site-specific dance-theatre work in a disused
former hospital in nearby Brooklyn by Third Rail Projects called Then She Fell and based on Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass as well as
Carroll’s relationship with Alice Liddell, the eleven-year old girl who was the
inspiration for the books. Carrroll befriended and photographed her until
the family mysteriously but abruptly severed contact with him a year later (the
relevent pages from his diary have been tantalisingly torn out).
The show
was intelligently conceived, elegantly designed and performed, and
appropriately dreamlike and seductive given the ambiguity of the material and
the venue itself. In fact it was impossible to tell what was introduced or ‘found’
in terms of objects, props, furniture, décor or interior architecture. The whole
experience was explicitly framed as an exploration of liminality. There were
only about twenty of us in the audience, and for two hours we were led from
floor to floor and room to room, invited to drink various substances (most of
which contained alcohol, so we had the option of declining), gradually separated
from each other, and shown or invited to take part in various activities (most
of which were highly choreographed but became increasingly intimate, and in the
course of which we progressed from being voyeurs to active participants). The
only rules were: don’t speak during the performance, and don’t open any closed
doors. Otherwise we were free to explore the rooms and any objects (or people) we
encountered; but mostly the experienced was carefully guided and choreographed,
with a continuous music score playing throughout the building, which cleverly kept
everything synchronised.
Often I
find immersive work formally interesting but a bit thin when it comes to
content and execution, but this show delivered on all fronts. Afterwards I
went for a drink with a few other audience-members and we shared what we’d been
through, as we’d all had different experiences with different performers in
different sequences. As with other successful immersive performances I’ve
attended, I still felt like I was in the show when I left the bar and wandered
back through the unfamilair and slightly hallucinatory environs of Williamsburg
to my apartment.
This lingering sense of having passed through to the other side of the looking glass
and being in a dream persisted throughout my time in New York. Indeed, it took
on a nightmarish aspect when things started spiralling out of control at the
end of the week.
*
The
following day I took the crowded subway across to Manhattan for a meeting. Afterwards
I headed uptown to the Circle in the Square theatre to see the matinee of a
Broadway (formerly off-Broadway) musical called Fun Home, based on Alison Bechdel’s autobiographical graphic novel about
a small-town young girl who comes out as gay in her college years, while her father
subsequently commits suicide after his own closet homosexuality is exposed.
I’m not a
big fan of musicals but I found this one consistently involving and deeply
moving, with an interesting and complex chamber score (in the sweet-sour
Sondheim idiom) by Jeanine Tesorim, intelligent lyrics and book by Lisa Kron,
skilful and economical staging in-the-round by Sam Gold, and superb
performances, especially from Michael Cerveris as the father (a role he
orginated at the Public Theatre production in 2014). The story itself packed a
real emotional punch – especially the central father-daughter relationship, and
the crippling impact of homophobia on an individual and his family – leavened
with lighter moments related to the three children’s involvement in the family
business (a funeral home) and the narrator-daughter’s discovery of her own
sexuality in college (including the hilarious and touching first-love song,
‘I’m changing my major to Joan’).
Diversity
is alive and well on Broadway, it seems – together with a healthy succession of
works transferring from original off-Broadway seasons. Certainly I saw more
evidence of this symbiotic relationship between alternative and mainstream
theatre in New York than back home in Australia: how many Blue Room, La Mama or
Griffin shows end up on the stages of Black Swan, the MTC or the STC, let alone
commercial theatres? Perhaps in this respect there’s something to be said for
the more ruthless (and comparatively underfunded) American theatre scene, which
to some extent facilitates this kind of symbiosis by eliminating the sclerotic
middle-ground of funded State Theatre Companies competely.
*
The
following afternoon I visited the Neue Gallerie on the edge of Central Park,
where a special exhibition featuring Klimt’s first portrait of Adèle
Bloch-Bauer was on show to coincide with the recent release of the film The Woman In Gold. The museum houses a
superb permanent collection of Viennese and German fin-de-siècle art, and has a
scale and focus that reminded me of the Bergruen Museum in Berlin with its
collection of classic modernist art.
The
painting itself is a stunning example of Klimt’s so-called ‘golden phase’, but
I was a little sceptical about the exhibition’s sensationalized and
oversimplified frame-narrative of how a heroic American lawyer restored the portrait
of Adèle from the Austrian State Gallery (who had acquired it after it was
requisitioned by the Nazis) to her niece (who promptly sold it for a
record-breaking sum) – especially when Adèle herself had requested that the
painting be left to the Austrian State Gallery in her will (a request which was
subsequently overlooked by her husband, who outlived her and then left all
‘his’ possessions to his descendants when he fled Vienna in 1938). To me, it
suggested a more complex story from which none of the litigants emerge without
blemish, and raised complex questions about art, ownership and property.
Upstairs at
the Neue Gallerie was a much more interesting exhibition juxtaposing early 20th
century Russian modernist art with contemporary German early expressionist
paintings by the Brücke and Blaue Reiter artists in Dresden and
Munich, some of whom also exhibited in Russia, and whose work was known by
their Russian counterparts; both were mutually influenced by Fauvism in France
at around the same time. Once again, I had a sense of the international
efflorescence of a certain phase of modernism, which was cruelly truncated by
the First World War and the subsequent rise of totalitarianism in both
countries.
*
Afterwards
I meandered through Central Park until the lamposts lit up and dusk began to
fall. Then I headed back to midtown Manhattan to see another Broadway revival
of an off-Broadway musical: Hedwig and
the Angry Inch at the Belasco Theatre.
The original star and co-writer of Hedwig
John Cameron Mitchell had recently finished reprising the title role and handed
it over to TV heartthrob Darren Criss (Glee); and the theatre was packed with fans
of both the show and Criss. As a Hedwig-virgin
(never having seen the show or the film) I knew little of what was store for
me, other than that it was a neo-glam post-punk rock musical about a former
East German genderqueer rock singer whose botched sex-change operation has left
her the mutilated sole member of ‘a
gender of one’.
In the
event, I was transported by the wit of the book and lyrics perhaps a little
more than the pastiche of the music, which perhaps inevitably felt a little
tired seventeen years down the track. I imagine seeing the original
off-Broadway incarnation in 1998 might have had something of the impact that The Rocky Horror Show had on me when I first
saw it at the converted former Channel 7 Tele-Theatre in Fitzroy in 1975
starring Max Phipps, whose vampire-like interpretation of Frank-N-Furter
imprinted itself indelibly on my young and impressionable mind. Still, I was
once more impressed by the appetite for sexual and gender diversity displayd by
a mostly straight-looking Broadway crowd, many of whom looked like office
parties or young couples on a date night. Admittedly they were probably mostly
there to see Criss; you could spot the Hedheads in contrast by their dark clothes,
makeup and inevitable wigs.
As an
experienced musical theatre star, Criss himself was more than able to hold his
own as a singer, hoofer and deliver of zinging one-liners, although he struck
me as perhaps a little young, sculpted and cleancut for the role. It almost
felt as if an element of ‘slumming it’ in the realm of genderqueerdom lent him
added sex-appeal for the crowd, who went beserk whenever he twerked or flirted,
and completely lost it when he finally stripped off the drag to expose a
perfectly ripped torso for his final song as Hedwig’s alter ego and soul-mate
Johnny Gnosis. I must admit I lost the plot at this point, as it all became a
bit heavy and conceptual for me; I found myself pining for the simple, innocent,
vacuous camp of Rocky Horror, which
paradoxically felt more liberating than the normalising morality that seemed
inherent in Hedwig’s final ‘acceptance of her true self’. Give me wigs and
heels any day.
*
The next
day I braved the crowds at MOMA to see Yoko
Ono: One Woman Show, 1960–1971, followed by two 1950s treats in MOMA’s
ongoing film program: Douglas Sirk’s glorious Techicolour melodrama Magnificent Obsession; and a rare 3D
screening of John Farrow’s classic John Wayne vehicle Hondo.
If Yoko
Ono’s popular celebrity has been enhanced by her association with John Lennon,
her status as an artist has been unfairly eclipsed for the same reason. This
two-way distortion has been intensified by politics: specifically the inherent politics
of being a woman, being Japanese, being a peace activist, and having a reputation
for being an obscure avant-garde conceptual and performance artist – all of
which are more ‘well-known’ than the work itself. Of course, to ‘know something
well’ is a form of not-knowing, ignorance, denial or even repression – all of
which is directly relevant to Yoko’s work as well as her person.
The first
MOMA exhibition exclusively devoted to her work takes as its point of departure
her first ‘one-woman show’ at the museum in 1971 – a conceptual intervention
which took the form of the artist claiming to have released flies in the museum
grounds and inviting the public to track them through the city. The substance
of the current exhbition is a remarkable survey of her work over the decade
preceding that intervention.
In fact a
consistent thread throughout Yoko’s work takes the form of invitations or
instructions, along with paradoxical installations, works of participatory
performance art, and the use of film (especially in extremely slow motion) to
explore the difference between aesthetic and routine perception. As such, her work
has more in common with Dada, Surrealism and Duchamps in particular than with
her contemporaries in the Pop-Art movement (Warhol being the most obvious
parallel, especially in their respective use of film). Beyond this stretches
the lineage of Japanese art and thought, from the tea ceremony to the Zen koan.
In short: unlike Warhol or Pop, Yoko is not interested in the social phenomena
of celebrity or the mass media and their trade in images, so much as in the existential
phenomenology of objects and embodiment.
Above all I
was struck by the sense of an artist courageously confronting and exploring
what she referred to as her own ‘shyness’ – a word that in this context has manifold
implications: personal, political, psychological, cultural, sexual and
gendered. Two famous performance works from 1964 reenacted or recorded this
with great force. In Bag Piece,
spectator-participants were invited to climb into a black cloth bag – which was
fastened so that it completely enclosed them – and lie on the gallery floor,
shed their clothes and move around however and for as long as they please.
Meanwhile a projection on a nearby wall of Cut
Piece showed a young Yoko sitting quietly on the floor onstage while
audience-participants were invited to cut away pieces of her clothing with
scissors (needless to say, in both works the use of the floor, clothing and
silence all have distinctive Japanese cultural references).
Ironically
though, given my earlier caveat about the distortion of Yoko’s reputation by
her association with Lennon, perhaps the most beautiful and moving work in the
exhibition for me was an extreme slow-motion film projection of John’s face gradually
breaking into a smile. In part it was the sheer beauty of that face (no matter
whom it belonged to); in part the revelation afforded by slow-motion of the timelessness
of images, even moving ones; but undeniably also the anecdotal pathos of
knowing the fate that lay in store for the man himself. What distinguishes this
from comparable works by Warhol is a quality of innocence distinctive to Yoko’s
oeuvre. For Warhol, mortality is something inherent in the image itself; for
Yoko, slow-motion film captures an image of eternity at the heart of life.
*
The
following night I was back in Central Park at the outdoor Delacorte Theatre for
The Tempest, part of The Public
Theatre’s annual summer season of Shakespeare in the Park (along with a forthcoming
production of Cymbeline). Despite the
incipient rain, there was a great sense of occasion among the 2,000-strong
crowd: a mixture of paying subscribers and those determined enough to queue
early and secure a free ticket – the core purpose of the season (as initiated
by The Public’s founding director Joe Papp) being to make Shakespeare available
to everyone regardless of income.
In the
event, the production itself was like a bad school play, and featured some
frankly amateur performances. The Prospero-Miranda-Ferdinand scenes were
painfully awkward; the scenes with the marooned Duke and courtiers almost
unwatchable; and the closing masque of Iris, Ceres and Juno staged like a kind
of eisteddford, complete with excruciatingly lame choreography and musical score.
The Stephano-Trinculo-Caliban comic subplot scenes were more successful; and
the Prospero-Ariel scenes had real pathos, accentuated by Sam Waterston’s
somewhat shaky but still forceful presence as Prospero (a part he famously
played forty years ago), in which physical and emotional fragility were
poignantly heightened by a deeply felt connection with the text. If both play
and role can be read as Shakespeare’s farewell to the stage as a playwright, here
there was a sense of an ageing actor contemplating his own twilight. When he
stepped forward to deliver his final quavering appeal to the audience – ‘Let
your indulgence set me free’ – I had a lump in my throat. Sometimes great works
speak to us even more revealingly in productions that miss the mark completely,
or in actors who identify with an aspect of their character all too closely.
Later that
night after I got back to my apartment in Williamsburg I wandered down to the
ferry terminal a couple of blocks away. It was a Saturday night, and there was
a small gathering of revellers scattered around the park benches on the lawn
overlooking the jetty. I found a place to sit and gazed out across the water at
the lights of Manhattan, feeling a little like Woody Allen, but without my own
version of Diane Keaton sitting there beside me.
*
The next
morning – it was a Sunday, the end of my first week in New York – I headed
downtown to the Film Forum for another cinephilic indulgence: a marathon
screening of Satyajit Ray’s classic Apu
trilogy. Over six hours in total of beautifully restored black-and-white neo-realism,
the films tell the story of a young boy who grows up in an Indian village,
moves to the city with his family, moves to an even bigger city as a promising
student, has a serendipitous marriage, finds love, and finally becomes a father, in
the face of a series of increasingly devastating personal losses. Based on a
famous Indian Bildungsroman, in some
ways it’s more like a pilgrim’s progress, with a spiritual dimension and
luminous beauty that set it apart from the Italian or French neo-realist films
of Rossellini or Renoir that inspired it.
Just before
the last screening began of Apu’s World,
I glanced at my smartphone in the darkness of the cinema, and there was an
email from my wife. I began reading it, and felt my world begin to dissolve.
We are such stuff as dreams are made on, as Prospero says at the end of the pageant in the last scene of The Tempest.
We are such stuff as dreams are made on, as Prospero says at the end of the pageant in the last scene of The Tempest.
New York,
my fellowship, my sense of reality, and apparently my marriage, had melted into
air.
Into thin
air.
*
Humph’s third and final Postcard from New York
will be posted next week.
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