40 Days and 40 Nights
ππ
Even after all this time  The Sun never says to the earth, "You owe me." Look what happens  With a love like that,  It lights the whole sky.
Hafez, (poet - Shiraz, Iran - 1315-1390)
Why does the sun go on shining
why does the sea rush to shore
don't they know it's the end of the world
Cause you don't love me anymore
country pop, recorded by Skeeter Davis (1963) 
written by Sylvia Dee & Arthur Kent
It was a warm spring evening. Love might have been in the air. I hadn't noticed. But I have heard that springtime is a suitable season for that sort of thing. I was secretly hoping my friend would be too late and that we would not be let into the theatre. That annoying theatre habit nowadays of not letting people enter during the show. I don't recall this sort of thing happening as much when I was a young theatregoer. Perhaps I've forgotten. But I do seem to remember something from theatre history about ancient Greek audiences being a welcome part of the spectacle as they responded accordingly during an event. But my theatre history knowledge is vague at best - articulate at its worst.
The review I read was not at all positive, except for a brief passage about the eloquence and skill of the two performers as they enacted a scene beside and inside of a makeshift bathing device - a tin tub of sorts. The reviewer was spot on. What they missed - the reviewer - was the idea that this is not really a show that invites critique. It is a meditation, a happening of sorts, and it may not be to everyones taste. Surprisingly enough, I loved it. Due in part to my companion's enthusiasm in the first few minutes when the 'play' took on an unassuming ritualistic effect and the import of the evening began to sink it.
I was ready to hate it after reading the review. But I failed. And failure, in this age of queer failure theory, can be a means of celebration.* And this is precisely what Kim Collier and Daniel Brooks appeared to be doing in 40 Days and 40 Nights - celebrating, enacting, inviting, inquiring, and interacting with the idea of love as it invades our hearts and souls from time to time over the course of a single lifetime.
* https://www.shmoop.com/queer-theory/judith-jack-halberstam-quotes.html
To raise the spectre of queer failure theory again, I'm an old queer, and happily embrace my devout love of a form of constructive bitterness, when it comes to love - and theatre. The questions that Kim Collier and Daniel Brooks posed, for the audience to consider, and respond to with tiny lights or single chalk drawn words on the dark floor, were answered in a variety of ways - from ambivalent to enthusiastic to maudlin and resigned. I invariably chose the latter.
None of the questions seemed leading in any manipulative way. In fact, I for one felt comfortable in the quiet solicitude of a brand of interactive theatre that never felt intrusive or annoying - to me. My maudlin resigned feelings on love were my own, never critiqued, just left alone to be reinstated in my heart and mind. It was a reverse catharsis. I did not rid myself of it. I was able to love it - to embrace, to hug the life out of and into it - as this meditation confirmed my lifelong hesitation and contentment with the choices I've made and the ones that have been made for me. 40 Days and 40 Nights aided me, myself, and I in this endeavour for 90 serene minutes of contemplation and enactment.
Brooks and Collier have had careers that range from the epically traditional (Collier; Angels In America, National Arts Centre, director) to the esoteric (Brooks; The Noam Chomsky Lectures, co-author with Guillermo Verdecchia). Their range has consisted of an impressive array of both form and thematic risk. 40 Days and 40 Nights expands this aesthetic latitude and delivers an intimate, at times delightfully indulgent kind of theatre gathering that opens itself up to particular forms of critique. And it's not that this critique is entirely unwarranted. You just have to be on the mood for it - like love...
Inspired in part by the poetry of  Hafez (a Persian writer of the 1300's) and the ideas of French philosopher Alain Badiou, this is ninety minutes of pure self-interrogation in the area of love and living within the framework of cultural assumptions that project romantic discourse upon an unruly emotion. Now there's a mouthful. 
This in fact could be the only critique I have to offer. Although the piece offers intimacy, communal interaction, and solitude all at once, it never really makes an effort to rigorously critique or investigate the potential social constructions that  love and romance entail when they come head to head - when they collide. There is the odd nod to communism (etc) which pricked up my ears due to my first chalk drawn response when the question was posed - what do you think of when you think of love? I drew a dollar sign on the floor. 
But at times it all seems a touch too lovey dovey, without enough cultural critique, with the exception of that beautiful bathtub scene that wins over even the harshest of critics. Just call me a  gender queer cock-drawn (aka known as cockeyed) pessimist, but I need a bit more healthy negativity to get me through the night. And yet, thanks to the optimism of my theatre companion that warm spring evening, I was able to buy into what appeared to be a genuine - if not a just a tad insular - meditation that Collier and Brooks invited spectators to take part in, to embrace, to love - or not... That's the question...
.
40 DAYS AND 40 NIGHTS RUNS AT THE THEATRE CENTRE UNTIL MAY 6TH
For  Immediate  Release:  
April  27
,  2018  •  Please  add  to  your  listings/announcements
40  DAYS  AND  40  NIGHTS
Co
-
produced  by  Necessary  Angel  Theatre  Company,
Electric  Company  Theatre  and
The  Theatre  Centre
Created  and  Performed  by  
Daniel  Brooks  and  Kim  Collier
April  25  
–
May  6,  2018  @  The  Theatre  Centre
Necessary  Angel  Theatre  Company,  Electric  Company  Theatre,  and  The  Theatre  Centre  are  very  
pleased  to  be  co
-
producing  
40  DAYS  AND  40  NIGHTS
,  a  new  work  created  and  performed  by  
Daniel  Brooks
and  
Kim  Collier
with  consulting  director  
Jennifer  Tarver  
for  Necessary  Angel.
40  DAYS  AND  40  NIGHTS
was  initially  developed  through  The  Theatre  Centre's  
Tracy  Wright  
Global  Archive
,  and  further  workshopped  by  
Necessary  Angel  Theatre  Company
and  
Electric  
Company  Theatre.  
Created  to  honour  the  inimitable  theatre  artist  Tracy  Wright,  The  Theatre  
Centre’s  
Tracy  Wright  Global  Archive
challenges  artists  to  explore  a  burning  question  and  
contemplate  a  new  direction  in  their  work  by  engaging  deeply  w
ith  communities  and  locations  across  
the  globe.  
40  DAYS  AND  40  NIGHTS
is  being  co
-
produced  in  part  to  mark  the  40
th
anniversary  season  of  the  
innovative  and  experimental  theatre  company  Necessary  Angel.
Armed  with
the  magical  poetry  of  Persian  poet  Hafe
z,  the  musings  of  French  philosopher  Alain  
Badiou,  and  impossible  questions,  two  lovers  on  a  spiritual  quest  challenge  themselves
to  live  for  40  
days  and  40  nights  making  all  choices  based  in  Love.  Mysterious,  symbolic,  and  intimate,  the  couple  
is  transfor
med  through  ceremony,  tenderness,  wisdom,  and  the  sheer  force  of  love  itself.
A  sensorial,  ritualistic,  celebration  for  the  performers  and  the  audience,  
40  DAYS  AND  40  NIGHTS
is  
an  investigation  of  the  nature  of  love;  
how  to  contemplate  love,  how  to  talk
about  love,  and  how  to  be  
open  to  the  possibility  of  love.
A  show
-
in
-
motion,  
each  performance  of  
40  DAYS  AND  40  NIGHTS
invites  the  audience  into  the  
conversation,  offering  them  agency  in  the  story,  and  embedding  them  in  the  feeling  of  love.
“What  do  you
think  about  when  you  think  about  Love?”
40  DAYS  AND  40  NIGHTS
Co
-
produced  by  Necessary  Angel  Theatre  Company,
Electric  Company  Theatre  and
The  Theatre  Centre
Created  and  Performed  by:
Daniel  Brooks
and
Kim  Collier
Consulting  Director  and  Dramaturg:
Jennifer  Tarver
Composition  and  Sound  Design:
Andrew  Creeggan
Additional  Composition  and  Sound:
Debashis  Sinha
Scenographer:
Ken  Mackenzie
Assistant  Set  &  Costume  Designer:
Lindsay  Dagger  Junkin
Associate  Lighting  Designer:
Jennifer  Lennon
a  nationally  recognized  live  arts  incubator  that  s
erves  as  a  research  and  
development  hub  for  the  cultural  sector.  We  are  a  public  space,  open  and  accessible  to  the  people  of  our  
community,  where  citizens  can  imagine,  debate,  celebrate,  protest,  unite  and  be  responsible  for  inventing  
the  future.  The  Theat
re  Centre’s  mission  is  to  nurture  artists,  invest  in  ideas  and  champion  new  work  and  
new  ways  of  working.  The  company  fosters  a  culture  of  innovation  by  embracing  risk  and  questioning  
traditional  notions  of  failure  and  success.  
The  Tracy  Wright  Global  Archive
is  a  project  that  inspires  artists  
to  explore  a  burning  question  and  contemplate  a  new  direction  in  their  work  by  engaging  deeply  with  
communities  and  locations  across  the  globe,  seeking  answers  to  their
questions  and  inspiring  new  
directions  in  their  practice.  





 
No comments:
Post a Comment