For
most of us, childhood was a convoluted but mostly predictable period of time.
And just when we thought we had this “human being” thing finally mastered,
somewhere in the 8 to 14 years-of-age zone, we were blindsided by the most
extraordinary thing that ever happened to our bodies.
Sexuality
is, of course, an intensely personal experience, and that is how it’s presented
in the fascinating one-woman play Feefer
Rising, now at Cleveland Public Theatre. Created and designed by director Raymond Bobgan
and performer Faye Hargate, this 80-minute journey through one girl’s sexual
awakening is a messy, honest, startling, and sometimes lyrical experience. The
production is augmented by evocative electronic music composed by Matthew Ryals,
and bandshell of paper constructed inside CPT’s Parish Hall.
Hargate
plays Kit, a girl dealing with the powerful and unfamiliar feelings that
puberty delivers out of the blue. She is beset by secrets questions, interactions with peers and a
host of behavioral options she never considered possible. Employing movement,
dance, singing, cooing, and some very frank dialogue, Hargate fashions a
landscape of blossoming female sexuality that you can feel bone-deep.
Kit
nicknames herself Feefer, perhaps after a pair of scissors she finds in her
family’s attic (the connection is never made entirely clear), and she confides
with those scissors as she explores what it means to now be growing into
womanhood. She experiences sex with school stud AJ, rails at her mother, and struggles
with all the cultural baggage that our society piles onto adolescent girls. There are fleeting moments of humor and even one old joke: "How do you know when your pet elephant is having her period? When you mattress is missing."
Necessarily,
this play doesn't provide a neat and linear progression, so the play jumps and slides from one event to
another—and sometimes to no event at all. This can be disorienting at times, and
the challenging acoustics in this space tend to garble some of the spoken lines,
especially when they’re delivered at a fast pace.
But
like sexuality itself, this play can be sensed as well as heard, if you let
down your barriers. Indeed, the understanding of what Feefer is going through
comes at us through multiple channels. And this evocative collaboration between
Bobgan and Hargate makes us feel as vulnerable, terrified and stimulated as
when that mysterious awakening first happened to each of us. Certain in the knowledge that, however wonderful or awful those new emotions were, there was no going back.
Feefer
Rising
Through
December 19 at Cleveland Public Theatre, 6415 Detroit Avenue, 216-631-2727.
No comments:
Post a Comment