Black Rider: The
Casting of the Magic Bullets
William S. Burroughs (Book); Tom Waits (Music & Lyrics)
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The Cast of Black Rider |
What kind of play will be penned by a writer who, as a young
man, shoots and kills his wife while playing with her a drinking game of “William
Tell”? Imagine his then discovering an old German folktale where an
unsuccessful suitor makes a deal with the devil to win his bride, only to shoot
her with a magic bullet that is under the devil’s spell. The resulting play by William S. Burroughs (with
music and lyrics by cult-favorite Tom Waits) that premiered in Hamburg, Germany
in 1990 – Black Rider: The Casting of the
Magic Bullets – can be described in a wide range of words: cartoonish,
bizarre, freaky, spooky, intriguing, confusing, disturbing. And while audiences may at times be
scratching their heads to ascertain the why’s and wherefores of the staging and
the story, the current production at Shotgun Players is certainly packing them
in every night, with December pre-sold-out audiences already leading to a
two-week extension in January; and it is still only late November!
The tale of a love- and/or knowledge-seeking man making a
sure-to-doom bargain with the devil appears in many cultures and in many forms
of literature and opera. In this version,
a young clerk named Wilhelm – “a man of
pen and ink” – finds himself in love with Kätchen (and she with him). However, he lacks the one necessary skill her
father most admires and demands of any potential husband: The ability to shoot and kill yonder dove in
the high tree branches. Desperate to win
her hand at any cost, Wilhelm is offered a deal he cannot refuse by a suddenly
appearing devil (in this case, a mixed-gender character named Pegleg often
calling into mind the MC of Cabaret). Wilhelm receives six magic bullets destined
to hit anything he desires, with one last one reserved by Pegleg to hit the
target he chooses. And like all the
devil-bargainers of the past, of course Wilhelm jumps at the offer and the sure
route to win his bride’s hand, all the time never contemplating the hell he
will unleash on his and others’ lives.
Mark Jackson directs in a highly stylized, often over-done
mode that borders between what one might see in an animated film and what one
could expect from a B-rated horror movie.
Monologue poems are given robotic, spastic, or full-body trance-like movements
to accompany a character’s words.
Various, odd persona come and go with a flow eerie and mysterious as the
story unfolds in nothing resembling a straightforward manner. The songs of Tom Waits pepper the action --
often with haunting, foreboding messages and tones, but also with occasionally
beautiful strains that come close to being hummable upon departing (“In the
Morning”).
The drama is set within the context of the devil’s sideshow
carnival (not unlike the settings of
Sondheim’s Assassins or
Russell/Krieger’s Side Show). The colorfully
fun background set by Sean Riley with its pictures of sundry carnival freaks
(and the sign “101% true”) is bordered on both sides by wonderfully scary trees
right out of Disney’s Sleeping Beauty. Props by Devon LaBelle range from a regularly
appearing coffin (often chauffeuring Pegleg inside it) to a wide range of funny
but realistic dead game that were shot by Wilhelm as the newly skilled
hunter. The lighting of Allen Willner is
both tongue-in-cheek and threatening as lit bullets make their way toward
possible targets. Matt Stines gets fully
into the act of producing this magical fable with a sound design that at times
echoes, screams, whispers, and thunders in all the right places. All in all, the Creative Team excels to
ensure the combined vision of the playwright and director comes to full life.
A major star of the production is the five-piece band
hovering above the stage in full view and under the direction of David
Möscheler. Over twenty different
instruments from bassoon to ocarina to toy drum set, pressure cap, and filing
cabinet become the symphony of sounds and sound effects. A good portion of the ever-shifting moods and
many of the spine-chilling anticipations of what will happen next come from the
music of Tom Waits as interpreted and played by this wonderful ensemble.
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El Beh |
The songs of the one-hour, forty-five-minute production
(some sixteen in all) are delivered by this cast with some mixed results but
also with a number of notable deliveries.
Outstanding when called upon to sing is the night’s overall star, El
Beh, who brings her rich, deep, and haunting voice to numbers like
“November.” Ms. Beh superbly crosses the
gender line to play the bearded, muscled hunter extraordinaire (and overall
full of himself), Robert, who wants Käthchen as his bride -- something she is
determined not to happen.
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Grave Ng |
Also taking on an opposite-sex role in a winning way is
Grace Ng as Wilhelm. Initially, she
employs an almost child-like singing voice and boy-like manner as the bookish,
non-hunting Wilhelm (as in the duet with Käthchen of “The Briar and the
Rose”). Her character matures as he
moves toward his deal with the devil, both in voice but also in wide-eyed
determination and eventual horror, with Ms. Ng. making some of the best use of her
glasses-encased eyes as an acting asset that I have seen all year on any
stage.
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Noelle Viñas & Grace Ng |
Wilhelm’s love target, Käthchen, is dressed in her plaid
skirt and matching sweater like an All-American school girl by designer Christine
Cook (by far the most conventional of Ms. Cook’s wild, wooly, and totally fun
costumes for all the other characters).
As Käthchen, Noelle Viñas takes a while to warm into the part both in
vocals and character. But as the musical
progresses, she begins to hit every mark bulls-eye, including a body rolling across
the stage while singing “Chase the Clouds Away” and a delightfully seductive
“I’ll Shoot the Moon,” where Käthchen transforms for a moment into a nightclub
singer, enticing audience members (all women, by the way) with her tempting
promise of love.
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Rotimi Agbablaka |
Outlandishly hobbling about in one high-heeled boot of red
and one black boot covered in sparkles, the gender-non-specific Pegleg, as played
by Rotimi Agbabiaka is both hilarious and diabolical. He is also often our guide to the story’s
background narrative. While sometimes
not quite hitting the mark note-wise, his cowboy interpretation of “Just the
Right Bullets” tempts in just the right ways the desperate Wilhelm.
Rounding out the cast are Elizabeth Carter as Käthchen’s
mother, Anne; Steven Hess in several roles including her father and
grandfather; and Kevin Clarke as a curious character “Old Uncle/Devil” who
fills in as sideshow hawker with a loud horn.
What is clear from both the script of Black Rider: The Casting of the Magic Bullets and this director’s
interpretation in the Shotgun Players production is that the devil we need most
to fear is not the one we may meet someday, but the one we carry around inside
us all the time. In a world today where
a certain leader spends much of his Tweeting time railing about all the devils
he sees around him and us, William S. Burroughs seems to be warning us that we
each are the main source of our potential undoing and that our doom or
redemption is totally in our own control.
Rating: 4 E
Black Rider: The
Casting of the Magic Bullets continues in an extended run through January
14, 2017 on the Ashby Stage of Shotgun Players, 1901 Ashby Avenue, Berkeley. Tickets are available online at www.shotgunplayers.org or by calling
510-841-6500.
Photos by Cheshire Isaacs.
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