There's a moment in The Method Gun
in which a character is being interviewed for a television show. To the
host's consternation, the guest is of the irascible persuasion, and
isn't much interested in sticking to the subject. The funny thing about
television, she tells her host (and I'm paraphrasing) is that you only
see what the camera wants you to. In the theater, everything's all
around you at the same time. She looks around the performance space. She
look at the host, grinning like an imp.
She might have been describing the Rude Mechanicals'
entire aesthetic philosophy. Taking honesty in the theater to its
logical extreme, Kirk Lynn's script gives us a Foremanesque universe in
which everything is on stage at once and the implicit promise is that
all of it will be used some time very soon. Of course this extends to
the titular gun, enshrined in a bird cage—an inheritance from the
group's acting guru, Stella Burden, who meant it to remind the actors
that they could kill one another at any moment.
Unlike Richard Foreman, however, The Method Gun has a definite
ubernarrative to tell, even if it's buried in several layers of
metatheatrical conceit. Essentially, Stella Burden disappeared nine
years previously, and her students have been rehearsing A Streetcar Named Desire ever since. A very special Streetcar it
is, since their exercise instructions were to work through the entire
script without ever playing Mitch, Stanley, Stella or Blanche.
Everywhere you look, there is the entire evening in miniature. Whether it's a menacing tiger ("Think how much better Death of a Salesman would have been if it were Death of a Salesman from Tiger!"),
crying practice, or shlongendorfers held aloft by helium balloons, the
play has something to say about how our sources of inspiration mold us
into something entirely unexpected.
Because this is also about
actors seeking the truth in their practiced art of pretend, there's also
lots of references to honesty and to realness. It's fitting indeed,
then, that the play's stunningly beautiful ending comes from a tense
sequence that's as honest as it gets on any stage — since we're
genuinely scared for the actors, even while we see watch enact their
spellbinding version of Streetcar (previously seen only in glimpses) in
its fullest realization. This vision is such a coup de theâtre that I won't describe it; I don't want to blunt its impact for you when you see it yourself.
I'll
just say you'll never see the Tennessee Williams staple quite the same
away. And that I hope we see the Mechanicals again soon, with PICA
bringing them back for subsequent TBA fests. The company is a national
treasure, though the Austin-based company (whose town copped a "Keep
Austin Weird" motto years before we adopted it here for local use) has a
shape-shifting sensibility especially endearing to Portlandians.
SEE IT: PICA's ninth Time-Based Art festival continues through Sept. 18.
WWeek 2015