Young actors wrestle with touchy subjects
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Tom Titus
Comedy and fantasy will take a back seat at the Laguna Playhouse
next weekend when the Youth Theater presents a dramatic exercise
calculated to touch more than a few nerves.
“The Wrestling Season,” Laurie Brooks’ examination of teenagers
and their search for sexual identity, will be presented next weekend
only as a special non-subscription event.
For audiences accustomed to fare such as “The Wizard of Oz,” the
show may jar a few sensibilities.
The play’s main characters, Matt and Luke, two close friends on a
high school wrestling team, are victimized by rumors about their
relationship spread by two of their rival teammates. Their two
choices -- trying to defuse the rumors or ignoring them -- both prove
unfortunate.
“This play has been a challenge,” declared Youth Theater director
Joe Lauderdale. “The issues of negative and damaging rumors and the
search for sexual identity are common obstacles that all teens face.
These issues are common experience for all people and some form.”
For the actors, the experience can be beneficial, Lauderdale
believes, because “they understand the situation and can relate to
it. However, it opens them up to a very vulnerable side of
themselves.”
Brooks’ script was honored with the Distinguished Play Award for
2001 by the American Alliance for Theater and Education. It grew, she
said, out of her work with high school students in the early 1990s
for a Commission on Human Rights.
“In six schools, teams of eight students and I spent time
dialoguing about bias and mistreatment in high school settings, and
explored ways of dramatizing those situations,” Brooks said. “Out of
this work grew scenes that demonstrated situations of prejudice and
unfair treatment.”
These scenes were presented at a countywide conference followed by
drama techniques to extend the performances. The conference was
attended by hundreds of high school students with an interest in
human rights and won a statewide award for excellence in programming.
But, Brooks noted, “It begged to be a play.”
Her problem was compressing all of her work into one script.
“I had to find a center, an arc that would translate what I had
discovered into language and images that would represent the depth of
the experience.”
When a friend invited Brooks to a wrestling match, she realized
she had found that central metaphor, and “The Wrestling Season” was
born.
“The play is told in the form of a wrestling match,” Lauderdale
said. “The dialogue is natural, but the actors’ physicality is more
athletic. There are several wrestling matches, choreographed by Todd
Loweth, in addition to other wrestling-inspired movement.
“The entire cast -- men and women -- wear only wrestling uniforms,
called singlets, which adds to their vulnerability,” Lauderdale
noted.
The playhouse has scheduled discussions between cast and audience
after each performance to discuss issues raised in the play.
“The play speaks volumes,” Lauderdale said, “but offers no answers
because there are no answers except, I suppose, don’t gossip and
don’t judge. And both of those are hard not to do.”
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Coastline Pilot.
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