Wooster Group's La Didone and Syfy's Battlestar Galactica
http://www.thirteen.org/sundayarts/blog/performance/intergalactic-travel-music/687/
This past week, the two most potent cultural events I’ve seen involve both space travel and music—Wooster Group’s La Didone, and SciFi Network’s Battlestar Galactica. Coincidence?
La Didone intertwines tellings of Francesco Cavalli’s opera and Mario Bava’s film, Terrore nello spazio (Planet of the Vampires, 1965). Wooster Group regulars, including Kate Valk, Ari Fliakos, and Scott Shepherd, re-enact Bava’s kitschy film pretty faithfully, down to the super-enunciated line readings and comically overt gestures. Elizabeth LeCompte directs this production at St. Ann’s Warehouse, which runs through April 26.


Recurring premonitions included following the savior of civilization on a chase through an Escher-like opera house. And the key to finding a planet involved enumerating Bob Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower” and using said code as space coordinates to save humanity and its variants.
The idea that the universal language of music is some form of celestial ordering is irresistible; its essential mathematical underpinnings make it plausible. Wouldn’t it be lovely to think that art can save humanity, or at least make the world a nice place to be?
Wait… that’s already true to an extent. So say we all.
Images: (top) LA DIDONE Photo by Paula Court featuring, from left to right, John Young, Scott Shepherd, Judson Williams. (bottom) Battlestar Galactica’s Jamie Bamber and Katie Sackhoff, courtesy SciFi Network
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