Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures  |  Adult
Boston  |  Portland  |  Providence
 
Books  |  Dance  |  Museum And Gallery  |  Theater

Theater offensive?

Eff bombing at the ART
By MIKE MILIARD  |  April 26, 2007

Every night, prior to his monologue Invincible Summer, which runs at the American Repertory Theatre (ART) in Harvard Square through April 29, Mike Daisey says the audience is warned. He paraphrases: “Ladies and gentlemen, this show will be performed in the patois and idiom of New York City. Turn your fucking cell phones off or we’ll shove them so far up your ass you’ll never find them again.”

Point taken. But last Thursday night, Daisey, sitting at a spare table onstage with just a glass of water and a handwritten outline, was flabbergasted when, during a segment of the soliloquy about “fucking Paris Hilton,” a group of 87 students and chaperones from Southern California’s Norco High School, who’d been in Boston for a choral competition, simultaneously got up and filed out of the theater. As they did, one parent chaperone punctuated their exodus by pouring a bottle of water all over Daisey’s notes, destroying them.

At Daisey’s Web site, you can see a video of the aquatic assault, and see the look on his rubbery expressive face. (Bemused, then appalled.) Daisey writes incredulously of the students’ egress, “like a flock of birds who’d been startled, the way they all moved so quickly, and at the same moment,” and the chaperone’s defacement of his work, “drenching everything in a kind of anti-baptism.”

“It was pretty terrible,” says Daisey. “The look on [the chaperone’s] face was very shocking: an intense look of hatred and complete arrogance. Complete pride. Total knowledge of righteousness.” Daisey’s transgression, he discovered later after tracking down the chaperone by phone — at the ART, he’d pleaded fruitlessly to have a dialogue with the departing crowd — was his use of R-rated language.

The ART’s Katalin Mitchell says that prior to purchasing a block of tickets, someone with the Norco group had called the theater inquiring about the monologue’s appropriateness for high schoolers. She was informed that it contained “very strong language” and “adult situations.” Nevertheless, Mitchell says, “when the f-word started flying, the parent chaperones and teachers basically just pulled out the kids and made an exit en masse. On their way out, they said they were a Christian high school.” (Cindy Lee, Norco High’s activities director, did not return a call seeking comment for this article.)

Daisey’s phone call with the chaperone was instructive, however. The man apologized, and confessed to having anger-management issues. He also talked about his children. “He still finds himself really frightened by the world, and everything that’s in it,” Daisey says. “The language, the violence, everything. His reaction to the world is to shut it out, to keep it from his children. I told him I thought there was a connection between this repression, just forcing everything down, and a violent outburst like this.”

Does Daisey think the episode could be fodder for a future monologue? “It’s hard to say. The element that I’m turning over and over in my head is that [Lee and the chaperone] were insistent: they didn’t want to talk about it being a freedom-of-speech issue; they just kept talking about how it was a safety issue. And they just kept repeating it: ‘We had to get our kids out of there. It was a safety issue.’ I think it’s amazing that the language of the war on terror has filtered down so far that you can declare anything a safety and security issue.”

Another Daisey monologue, Monopoly!, runs at the American Repertory Theatre May 1 through 5.

On the Web
Mike Daisey: //www.mikedaisey.com

Related:
  • Coming up Daisey
    Invincible Summer and Monopoly! head for Cambridge
  • September songs
    Invincible Summer ; The Fantasticks ; I Have Before Me a Remarkable Document Given to Me by a Young Lady from Rwanda
  • Spring stages
    From hoofers to Mormons and more
  • More more >
  Topics: Theater , Mike Daisey , Paris Hilton
  • Share:
  • RSS feed Rss
  • Email this article to a friend Email
  • Print this article Print
Comments
Theater offensive?
I,am a Father,of one of the kids, my son was there . One thing most people are missing. It seems to me, Mr. Mike Daisey knew before he posted on youtube, who this group were and came from. In the info area of the clip It states 87 members of a Christian group. why? I talk to him about this in messages ,he said he had posted before he knew who they were. It does not look that way to me . The one that puts the clips on youtube, are able to pull their clips, and repost, They can remove comments and block veiws from making a comment. Which he did to me. Day of walk out 4-19-07 Talked with Cindy L. from the school and the man the poured water David 4-20-07 acording to news papers and his site. Youtube shows posted 4-21-07. Why? After reading much about Mr. Daisey and hid followers. I think I have the answer. Seems as he forgave 1 and punished 86 others lets not count the other 11 adults just the 75 kids that were 14-17 years of age. He heard there cries with their comments Thank you for your time Jim
By yesyoucan on 05/03/2007 at 9:56:59

Election - Democratic National Conference
ARTICLES BY MIKE MILIARD
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   DEATH OF A HOOP DREAM  |  August 27, 2008
    Mario Hornsby Jr. was senselessly gunned down in May. Now his father is trying to make sure his death was not in vain.
  •   SCHMALTZ CONEY ISLAND LAGERS  |  August 13, 2008
    Freaking delicious
  •   MOUND WISDOM  |  August 19, 2008
    Cartoons of pitchers and catchers talking are a New Yorker staple. What is so funny about rubbers?
  •   NOT BY GEORGE  |  August 11, 2008
    Robot Chicken: Star Wars
  •   EIGHT IS ENOUGH  |  August 08, 2008
    Olympians to watch

 See all articles by: MIKE MILIARD

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



Featured Articles in Theater:
Thursday, August 28, 2008  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
StuffAtNight Latest:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2008 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group