This entry was posted on 6/23/2008 12:21 AM and is filed under uncategorized.

Tuesday June 17 2008
Switching from horses to theatre this week...
The
Gospel at Colonus is coming home: to Athens, to the Herodus Atticus
Theatre, an outdoor amphitheatre, underneath the Acropolis.

This
play is a black gospel musical version of Sophocles' tragedy, Oedipus
at Colonus, that premiered 2408 years ago in the Theatre of Dionysos -
the ruins of which are 100 yards away. Sophocles was in the chorus. He
walked, right where we are walking, and did this play, as we will do.
Once
every two or three years, the Gospel calls, and we all - about 35 of us
regulars - drop everything that we are doing, and we come - to Russia
or Brazil or Vienna or Michigan or Harlem or Salt Lake City or Athens.
And we have come from all over the US: this time about 55 of us in
total (including the choir), from New York, California, Minnesota,
Georgia, Delaware, Chicago, and Idaho (that's me).
And it's the
25th anniversary of our show. And it will be a full moon while we are
here. And it's the summer solstice. All signs point to us being right
where we should be.
It's not just the way the story is presented
that is good, and unique - as preached in a black church - and it's not
just the music that is astonishingly good; it's the Colonus family that
is the essence of this event. I've been a privileged part of this
family for twelve years, joining them in Seattle in 1995 as the sound
engineer. The talent in the show is extraordinary: different gospel
choirs have performed in it (the Abyssinian choir from Harlem being the
featured choir the last few years); there's the Steele family from
Minneapolis; the Soul Stirrers from Chicago; and members of the Blind
Boys of Alabama; not to mention other amazingly gifted solo singers, and musicians.
It's going to be crazy - a tight set up and tech and rehearsal schedule - for a
one night
show. One of the Blind Boys, who has done the show since the beginning,
Clarence, is not coming, due to poor health and the rigors of travel
and rehearsal. Taking his part is the other main Blind Boy, Jimmy.
Filling other actors' and singers' and musicians' parts is nothing for
this cast - everybody pretty much knows everybody's lines and
instruments. Heck, even I can quote the entire show. Saying and singing
Clarence's lines will be the easy part; but literally stepping into
Clarence's shoes will be difficult, because Jimmy is (as Clarence is),
blind. He's never
seen where Oedipus stands or walks during the
show. He'll have to learn that in a very short time. Not to mention we
have stairs on half of this stage. Moreover, a completely new singer is
joining the show. Ben Moore has been with the Blind Boys for 2 years,
but he's never done the Gospel. He steps into Jimmy's shoes... and
since he's blind also, this will be another gigantic literal leap.
And,
this is the biggest stage we have EVER been on. It's at least double in
size. There are not just 2 entrances to the stage to work with, but 5
(or 13, if you count the entrances from the house, and I bet you the
director will use them). Which means all the blocking (positioning) on
stage must be re-created, (and reproduced consistently by all,
including the Blind Boys); all the light cues rewritten; and every new
space presents new problems with wireless microphone systems, and there
are at least 30 wireless mics on this show.

And
there's just no time to get everything set up - there is never enough
time, but somehow, it all comes together in the end. But this one show
is particularly important - every time we get together and do the show,
we think it really might be our last. And if this is our last one, and
since it is coming home where it belongs, it's so important that it is
perfect. We feel we must honor not only the Greeks with their own play,
but the Gods that let us come here.
How will we get it all done in time for the Saturday night performance?
At
our tech meeting, there are many furrowed brows, much frowning and
rubbing of foreheads. We just don't have the time we need. Lights
needs... Sound needs... Stage managers need... The director needs...
I
need to see a runthrough, to see who is singing and saying what parts.
It always changes a little bit every show anyway, and now I'll have new
microphones to bring up in different places, and new voices to try to
balance.

And
the whole thing is an acute tease. All this work for ONE SHOW. One
exquisite, perhaps last performance, perhaps the last time this family
ever gets together; and here, in this monumental, sacred place. It is
like taking one bite of Ben and Jerry's Coffee Toffee Crunch ice cream,
and putting the pint back. It is like taking one small sip of the
perfect cappuchino, and giving the rest of the cup back.
But still it is a gift from the Gods, this small gift we offer back, and we all feel privileged to be here.
