I
took my first trip to New York my junior year of college with my undergraduate
program and saw a bunch of shows! Two shows I can think of that certainly pertain
to this assignment are Memphis: The
Musical and Freud's Last Session.
The first is one that I still consider one my favorite musicals. The world of Memphis was wonderfully executed. I knew
when it was night versus when it was day, the period style clothing perfectly
suited the 1950's, the accents were wonderful, and the acting and singing were
off the charts! After hearing their final number, "Steal Your Rock n
Roll," I left the theatre feeling rejuvenated and excited! I could live
life fully! I didn’t have the restrictions of segregation and racism holding me
back! I could move to New York and
pursue my dreams like Felicia! No one could stop me! No one could steal my rock
n roll! This show definitely created
some real emotions within me. I felt it
well into the next day.
The
next day, I saw a play off-broadway in a little black-box called Freud's Last Session. This show centers
on a fictional meeting of two real life historical figures: Sigmund Freud and
C.S. Lewis. They simply sit in Freud's office, two weeks before Freud's death,
and have a discussion about sex, love, and God for two and a half hours. I felt
like I was a fly on the wall. It was probably a mix of the black box and the
intimate nature of the set. It was a little too "real." I won't lie.
I was so tired from the travel, 3 hour production of Memphis from the night before, and the fact that these guys were
just talking and talking and talking, that I fell asleep. At a talk-back with
the actors that portrayed Freud and Lewis, we learned that this
"meet-up" between the two figures never could have actually happened.
It was a "what if." The actor who portrayed C.S. Lewis, the famed
theologian, actually did no historical research on his character past the point
that the playwright set his age. He said he didn't want to think too far ahead.
He wanted to portray his character as realistically as possible.
A
quote from Robin Soans in "Verbatim Theatre" says, "How is
(documentary theatre) different from well-written and well-constructed imagined
plays? The answer is: it isn't. The categorization is irksome. Verbatim plays
are far more like conventional plays than is generally acknowledged."
When I think back, Freud's Last Session was almost a
documentary drama without the verbatim. It was a mix of the real (the
characters) with the "well-constructed and well-imagined" (the
meeting of the characters). I now find it very intriguing that the actor
playing C.S. Lewis went to such length to only study a certain part of his
character's history for a piece of theatre that, historically, never could have
happened.
Memphis and Freud’s Last
Session definitely have similarities in that they are both fictional pieces
of theatre. The latter, however, in my opinion,
offers a much more naturalistic view of theatre, despite the fact that it’s
fictional and not just because people didn’t randomly burst into song. Like I said, it was almost “too real” and, despite
the fact that we know the exchange never could have happened, I think my views
of both C.S. Lewis and Sigmund Freud have been affected since seeing that
performance.
I love seeing shows like Memphis! Those shows are reasons why people return to the theatre and are almost a rebirth of truth and passion within those of us that want to pursue this for a living. Shows like Sessions are always hard to sit through and justify, however I think this unveils some truth about the fact that we all must once again, see a play about old men and there opinions and lives, and this should bring us a new sense of truth. Which seems to once again only point out the truth that the theatre is still by and large a mans game.
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