All Over the Map
Opus in Philadelphia, No Danger of the Spiritual Thing in Chicago, and Return (The Sarajevo Project) in Toronto.

(Photo © Mark Garvin)
Hollinger trained as a violist at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and this experience shows in his writing. "The sound, the rhythm, pace, and even suggested pitch of the lines are very important to me and have a musicality all their own," he remarks. He goes so far as to indicate Pinteresque pauses in the dialogue, the way a composer would use rests, even specifying the amount of time that should pass between speeches.
While he has written both musicals and pop songs, Hollinger hesitates to refer to himself as a composer. "I think of a composer as someone who wears a tuxedo," he quips. "I wear jeans." And, indeed, he has been best known as a playwright ever since the then-emerging Arden Theatre produced his first theatrical effort, An Empty Plate in the Café de Grand Boeuf.
Given the ephemeral nature of theater and music, does Hollinger think much about posterity? "I would be lying if I didn't say that I secretly hope my plays will be performed after I'm gone," he says. "Nothing really lasts forever -- not even Shakespeare. But he hasn't worn out yet!"
-- A.K.
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is part of No Danger of the Spiritual Thing
(Photo © Kristin Basta)
For this unusual event, Curious is joined by the Chicago-based companies Greasy Joan & Co., The Hypocrites, Lucky Plush, and Prop Thtr. They will present different pieces, often in contrasting styles. "It's a place to mix up the forms," explains O'Reilly. "One of the things that's interesting about working on the fringe and doing new work in Chicago is that there's a tremendous overlap; we're as likely to be influenced by a music piece or performance piece as we are by a piece of text."
At MCA, the various performances are being staged in unique locations, including a stairwell, a freight elevator, and a fish pond. "Audience members are divided into groups and are led through the museum," says O'Reilly. "You're experiencing the whole building as you see the different pieces." All of the groups end up in the MCA's theater space at the end of the program, and they see one work together. When the program moves to the Prop Thtr's black box space, O'Reilly remarks, "some real adjustments will be needed because of the sprawl of decisions that the artists have made." Certain pieces will only be performed at the MCA, while others -- including Catastrophe and That Time -- will only be performed at Prop Thtr.
"No danger of the spiritual thing" is a quote from Beckett's Play, which Curious is presenting in the freight elevator at the museum. "The piece is about isolation and rot, with three characters in urns that suggest death urns or garbage cans," says O'Reilly. "The actors' make-up is exaggerated so that they're corpse-like. It makes sense to do the piece in a very small space; there's this feeling of containment in the freight elevator that really appeals to us. We have done Beckett works twice before, always in the dead of winter. It's not even on purpose; it's just what draws our psyche. People come really wanting it, needing something of Beckett's crabby beauty to get through the hard times."
-- D.B.
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in Return (The Sarajevo Project)
(Photo © Chris Gallow)
This project began when company member Christopher Morris traveled to the war-torn country in 2003 and literally went door-to-door to find potential collaborators. Eventually, he found the renowned director Faruk Loncarevic, who was so impressed by the Canadian company's ideas, dedication, and open-mindedness that he invited the Theatrefront troupe into his studios. The Canadian actors quickly learned that the Bosnian style of performing is much less tied to naturalism than what we normally see in North America.
For example, in an early rehearsal, both teams of actors interpreted a breakup scene. Says Theatrefront's artistic director, Daryl Cloran, "The Canadian actors did this lovely, intimate thing where they just talked; but when the Bosnians did the same scene, the woman grabbed the man and threw him to the ground." The play was developed through improvisation. When it was finally showcased in one sold-out workshop performance in Bosnia, the audience was almost equally divided between local Bosnians and visiting Canadians, with each group laughing at jokes in its native language.
Next up is a production in South Africa, for which Theatrefront will team up with that country's illustrious Baxter Theatre. Since South Africa has a dizzying number of official languages, the show -- about seven lonely souls who change each other's lives -- is going to be movement-based. "I've been proud of what we've achieved so far in finding ways to integrate this story that only these two groups of people could have built together," says Cloran.
-- A.K.
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