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An Impersonation of Angels or the Enigma
of Desire (Impressions
- of the Life of Salvador Dali)
- by Dan Carbone
review by Michael Scott Moore in SF Weekly
March 10, 2004
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- A little poetic inspiration and a lot of goofy impersonation of
the surreal
- An Impersonation of Angels started four years ago as Salvador
Dali Talks to the Animals -- Dan Carbone's teeming life of Dali, performed
in the manner of a surreal painting. Audience members who have already
seen the new version may not believe me when I say it's more coherent than
the old one, but it is. Impersonation follows Dali through life
and death, as he learns to be an artist and ages into a melancholy self-caricature.
He's pursued by someone we meet in the first scene, "Dead Baby Salvador
in Limbo" -- a baby in frilly pajamas played by the bearded, stentorian-voiced
Paul Gerrior. It seems Dali's mother miscarried a child named "Salvador
Dali" before the great painter was born. This Baby Salvador haunts
the artist with questions of life, death, and identity. The play has flashes
of pure brilliance: When Carbone is good, he's both hilarious and sublime.
But a lot of it is still disjointed and frustrating. Christian Cagigel
stands out in the cast as Federico García Lorca, giving an eloquent
speech about poetic inspiration, or duende; later he dies with harrowing
musicality as a bull, stabbed in the back with colorful red picas, his
masked head resting on a silver platter while Dali talks to his treacherous
wife Gala about evil and love and a maternal woman chirps like a bird in
a tree. These rhythmic, musical, choreographed scenes are the strongest:
They have duende, while the rest of the play shambles through mere silliness,
or a goofy impersonation of the surreal.
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