Stage blogging

A chat room sex scandal
By MEGAN GRUMBLING  |  April 1, 2009

The main characters of the play Speech and Debate, three Oregon high school misfits, do a lot of their living among the modern technologies of chat rooms, Google, and personal video blogs. These technologies sometimes hyper-contextualize their lives, and other times liberate them from context almost entirely — which makes the border realm between adolescence and adulthood a particularly fraught and interesting place.

In this brave new medial world, the three teens of Speech and Debate are brought together by the cyber-ripples of a sex scandal involving a chat room and one of their teachers. The unlikely team — nerdy aspiring journalist Soloman (Christopher Reiling), out gay Howie (Philip Hobby), and awkward drama girl Diwata (Rachel Flehinger) — are out to disclose the truth in Stephen Karam's irreverent dark comedy. Sean Mewshaw directs a thrillingly multi-medial production in the first of what I hope will be many theater works presented by SPACE Gallery.

This savvy and technologically glamorous production shows us portraits of the teens via beautifully projected manifestations of their own media: We watch Diwata talk into a camera to broadcast her video blog while simultaneously, her huge image looks right into our eyes from the screen behind her. When Howie flirts in a chat room, the bated-breath start and stop of the text is large and addictively rhythmic behind him. The result is an exhilarating and precisely-pitched portrait not just of three teenagers with a mission, but of adolescence itself in this uber-cyber-century.

I strongly recommend making time for this one. The acting is smart and rambunctious and the technical magic is utterly engrossing — including, as you might expect from SPACE, a super sound system (blasting, notably, "Hip-Hop-O-Potamus" and George Michael's "Freedom").

Speech and Debate | at SPACE Gallery, in Portland | April 1 @ 10:30 pm and April 4 and 5 @ 8 pm | 207.838.3006

Related: Review: Surviving the vivid depravity of Killer Joe, Get a glimpse of Open Waters' Farms and Fables project, Crucibles, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Internet, Science and Technology, Technology,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY MEGAN GRUMBLING
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   THOUGHTFUL LAUGHS IN WITTENBERG  |  May 09, 2013
    Much has been made of Prince Hamlet's exhausting philosophical indecision. To be or not? To kill or not? He has a hell of a time figuring it out, when he should be happily ensconced in college life back in Wittenberg.
  •   TWELVE MAINE PLAYS IN ACORN’S FESTIVAL  |  May 03, 2013
    It's time once again for Acorn Productions' annual celebration of the playwrights living among us.
  •   A SURREAL COMEDY FROM DRAMATIC REP  |  April 24, 2013
    Life is in upheaval for these four friends, and all of them will need to go deep to make sense of things in Swimming in the Shallows , a comedy with a touch of the surreal, by Adam Bock.
  •   WOOLF’S ORLANDO ON STAGE AT USM  |  April 25, 2013
    Insights into both the masculine and the feminine are at the center of Virginia Woolf's Orlando , a fabulist commentary on the fluidity of gender and sexual identity.
  •   CAROLYN GAGE’S NEW SHORT PLAYS GIVE WOMEN VOICE  |  April 10, 2013
    Women's experience of slavery, genocide, and cultural oppression, says playwright Carolyn Gage, is very different than men's: Sexual violence and women's ability to give birth makes them subject to a particularly penetrating form of colonization. And even the best-intentioned histories, she adds, often try to "disappear" that difference.

 See all articles by: MEGAN GRUMBLING