- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Silent Movie
- by Stephanie Abrams, Kinetic Theory Experimental
Theatre
review by Michael Scott Moore in SF Weekly
June 18, 2003
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- Doing clever stuff with mime seems to be local theater's soupe du
jour, and Kinetic Theory Experimental Theatre has put on a wordless,
impeccably cool re-enactment of a '20's-era silent film. Stephanie Abrams,
Simon Chaban, and Sean Michael Williford play in a black-and-white penny
dreadful about a young couple who get kidnapped by an evil baron. Abrams'
young woman is sweet and demure, in a polka-dotted dress, hiding behind
her boyfriend and gushing with pleasure when he picks her a flower -- or
presents her with an engagement ring. Chaban's young man is an amusing
stiff and civilized hero in a gray suit who finds himself (late in the
show) battling the undead with a sword. Williford is a wonderfully nefarious
villian, in a black cape and ridiculous sideburns, turning the young couple's
happiness into a living hell for no good reason. He even hypnotizes the
projectionist, a bumbling woman played by Carrie Loser, who joins the show
in full-color costume. The 90-minute melodrama plays out with no sound
except an original (and very funny) piano score by Steven M. Forker; the
most turbulent music seems to involve not just oridinary piano, but also
a frantic harpsichord and someone pounding on the bass strings of an echoey
grand with a wooden mallet. This is not your mother's mime: It's a stylish
period piece that manages to be postmodern and even sexy.
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