Sunday, July 19, 2009

Contemporary is chiefly all right with me

Midweek, I began my current play-going marathon by heading 5.5 hours northwards to the small town of Shepherdstown, West Virginia. It's way on the eastern edge of the state, one of the collection of old towns in that area such as Harpers Ferry, Martinsburg and only four miles from Shepherdstown but in Maryland, Sharpsburg, near which the tragic Antietam battle was fought during the Civil War.

At Shepherd University, each summer since 1991, the Contemporary American Theater Festival has brought new plays to production on the stages here -- this year, there were five, performed in three different venues. A close friend of ours is the business manager at CATF, which is how I learned of it. In addition to some excellent genealogical research in that area, I was lucky enough to see three of those five shows.

The first show was called "Farrugut North" and, apparently, has already been optioned for a potential movie with George Clooney. The stage version was quite well done, with a chiefly representational set to tell the story of a young campaigner working the presidential campaign in Iowa, dirty tricks, dirty mouths and ultimate disillusionment (and more dirty tricks). Anyone who was paying attention was unlikely to walk away without a deeper cynicism towards the American political process.

The second show was "Fifty Words," referring to the idea that there are probably fifty different words that can be used to reflect "love." The show, which was a bit on the long side for a no-intermission production, was quite well acted by two people, and dissected, almost literally, a marriage in trouble. Thought this is apparently OK or even desirable for this particular contemporary theater festival, this play and the next ended with a fairly ambiguous closing. It's not my favorite thing, but still, I can't take too many points off given the other strengths of this show.

Finally, I saw "Yankee Tavern," the latest completed script by prolific playwright Steven Dietz, whose "Trust" I saw produced in 2006 at Spoleto. This one had a great realistic set of an old-fashioned (and fading) bar and delved into conspiracy theories in the aftermath of 9-11, and some interesting characters. Once again, the ending left some questions which I suspect we were meant to fill in for ourselves. If you really wanted to.

All in all, it was an interesting and entertaining few hours in the theaters up in West Virginia. I'm definitely glad I went.

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