The Events
David Greig
![]() | |
| Julia McNeal & Caleb Cabrera |
“Everything I thought was solid is un-solid.
What’s the root of this unraveling?
Events, dear Boy, events.”
In small clumps of chatting friends, they gather around the
coffee and tea station (complete with its Costco-size Coffee-mate), music in
hand and with of course women far outnumbering men, as is usually the case for
most community choirs. After a few
minutes, they stand in front of the piano and begin to lift their dozen voices
in gorgeous, a cappella waves of light, happy harmonies that twist and turn in
the air all around us. And unlike the
choir on that night when The Boy arrived unannounced but still welcomed by its
director, Claire, these members of the Gallimaufry Chamber Chorus will all go
home tonight; for they are on the Shotgun Players stage as a witnessing chorus
of The Events that playwright David
Greig and director Susannah Martin have planned for them and us.
While inspired by the horrific massacre at Norway’s Workers
Youth League summer camp on July 22, 2011, The
Events by David Greig cannot help but remind an American audience of the
hate crime and mass shooting on the evening of July 17, 2015 at the Emanuel
A.M.E. Church when a 21-year-old white supremacist killed nine. We meet one survivor of a similar but
fictional attack on a choir of mostly immigrants – of people who look different
from the boy who will gun them down. As
the director of that ill-fated choir, she is now on a mission not to understand
what happened to her (“I know what happened to me”), but to “understand what
happened to him.” And as she tries to
piece together a puzzle that does not seem it wants to be or even can be
solved, she once again shows up each week to direct a new set of aspiring
singers from the community, as she is doing tonight in front of us.
![]() |
| Julia McNeal |
As Claire, Julia McNeal exudes palpable, bottled-up
intensity and feeling even in her many quiet moments where she is clearly just trying
to think through the mystery she hopes to solve. Her face is a map of strain from those events
we will not witness; but, through her, we so come to understand and to some
extent, experience – events like when the perpetrator found her and one older
choir member huddled in a small room and demanded to know who should get his
one, final bullet. But we see also hints
of the joy Claire once felt in the occasional smiles that brighten Ms. McNeil’s
entire being, and we know that here is a woman who has a light inside her she
is just looking to reignite by knowing why ... Why did this boy do that awful
act?
![]() |
| Julia McNeal and a Community Chorus |
“Is he nuts, or is he evil?”
That is the question Claire keeps asking everyone who might have a clue
to the answer. “Is it possible he’s
insane ... If he’s insane, then it’s not his fault.” Her frustration is reflected in the choir as
she directs them in nonsensical syllables that become a sung mantra of “I am
out of control, there’s no where to go now.”
And yet her determination to plunge ahead in her probing is also
reflected in an emotional, beautiful rendition of “How Can I Keep from Singing”
that she leads, leaving her and many of us in the audience with tears
welling.
But her almost manic insistence of “If I can find the cause,
I can lay it to rest” leads her exasperated life partner, Katrina, to ask,
“What if shit just fucking happens?” and her choir that has been asked to stomp
and chant in a circle with a local shaman (from Fairfield, no less) to walk out
suggesting in their own exhaustion, “Maybe forgetting is best.”
![]() |
| Julia McNeal & Caleb Cabrera |
Through it all, Julia McNeal is masterful as she leads her
Claire through a maze of interviews, self-explorations, and moments of total,
emotional breakdown. Equally stunning in
his performance is The Boy who plays everyone from Katrina to Claire’s psychologist,
a right-wing politician, The Boy’s father, and his supposed best friend. And among many other roles, Caleb Cabrera of
course also embodies the young shooter and murderer himself. Often in a matter of seconds, he switches
persona; but in voice and overall looks, he is always The Boy.
Director Susannah Martin never lets us forget that the
assailant is just a rather handsome, solemn-faced guy who wears an everyday
hoodie and has such sad, deep eyes that it is obvious there is a traumatic
story there we have yet to hear. As The
Boy, Caleb Cabrera is eerily steady, peering, and present – even when off to
the side or in some temporary role that calls him to say lines of others who
are interacting with Claire as she tries to figure out who He is, that Boy
behind the face of the other role Mr. Cabrera is now portraying.
![]() |
| Caleb Cabrera |
The Greek-like Chorus rises to interact and respond to The
Boy, too, in a manner to raise one’s neck hairs in a shuddering moment of
chill. Standing on top of the piano, The
Boy – now without shirt in an aboriginal form of himself – leads them in
singing, “If I am going to make my mark on this world, I have to do it
now.” And we as audience members are
sitting there, we begin to wander through our own growing list of questions
about what does motivate young, beautiful boys like this one to walk into a
church, a gay nightclub, a Parisian arena, a Turkish plaza, or one of dozens of
other to-that-moment peaceful places and suddenly mow down innocent victims?
Beyond the script, the two actors, the director, and the
choir (with music coordinated by Lisa Quoresimo), the power of The Events is further enhanced by
extraordinary sound design by Jake Rodriguez.
Much of the urgency and tension that rarely dissipates during the
ninety-minute production is due to the background, subtle-but-felt music beats,
echoing clock ticks, or unsettling heartbeats that we are often vaguely aware
of as they gently throb even inside us.
The lighting of Wolfgang Lancelot Wachalovsky also adds its own moments
of drama, especially in the final seconds when light makes a lasting
statement. Angrette McCloskey’s set is
effectively any and every community center or church multi-purpose room where
community members might gather on a weeknight to sing.
The genius of David Greig particularly shines through in his
instruction to a company like Shotgun Players to use a different community
choir each night of the play’s performance.
For Shotgun, that means lining up almost 25 choirs and a total of 350
singers. For the Shotgun audience, it
means we get to understand the power of music to tell a story and to heal wounds
as well the power of watching others – not unlike ourselves -- react and
comment through their music and in real time to The Events unfolding in front of us all.
The sum total is an evening none of us – choir members or
theatre’s patrons – is like soon to forget, especially when the next, sadly
inevitable headline screams of another boy, another atrocity.
Rating: 5 E
The Events
continues through June 4, 2017 at the Ashby Stage of Shotgun Players, 1901
Ashby Avenue, Berkeley. Tickets are
available at https://shotgunplayers.org/ or by calling 510-841-6500.
Photos by Jessica Palopoli





No comments:
Post a Comment