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- VERMILION's TEXT -


[Communique: 11.29.02]

Iben was a girl without words. I watched her grow, fly and fall. She fell seven times; she got up eight.

- Eugenio Barba, about Iben Nagel Rasmussen

"She fell seven times. She got up eight."

I am home this weekend. It is mostly very nice. Timmy asked me to bring him back some Jorge Luis Borges. He is an author I have never been able to love as much as other people expected me too. My dad agrees, although he brought me this:

EVERYTHING AND NOTHING

There was no one in him; behind his face (which even through the bad paintings of those times resembles no other) and his words, which were copious, fantastic and stormy, there was only a bit of coldness, a dream dreamt by no one. At first he thought that all people were like him, but the astonishment of a friend to whom he had begun to speak of this emptiness showed him his error and made him feel always that an individual should not differ in outward appearance. Once he thought that in books he would find a cure for his ill and thus he learned the small Latin and less Greek a contemporary would speak of; later he considered that what he sought might well be found in an elemental rite of humanity, and let himself be initiated by Anne Hathaway one long June afternoon. At the age of twenty-odd years he went to London. Instinctively he had already become proficient in the habit of simulating that he was someone, so that others would not discover his condition as no one; in London he found the profession to which he was predestined, that of the actor, who on a stage plays at being another before a gathering of people who play at taking him for that other person. His histrionic tasks brought him a singular satisfaction, perhaps the first he had ever known; but once the last verse had been acclaimed and the last dead man withdrawn from the stage, the hated flavor of unreality returned to him. He ceased to be Ferrex or Tamerlane and became no one again. Thus hounded, he took to imagining other heroes and other tragic fables. And so, while his flesh fulfilled its destiny as flesh in the taverns and brothels of London, the soul that inhabited him was Caesar, who disregards the augur's admonition, and Juliet, who abhors the lark, and Macbeth, who converses on the plain with the witches who are also Fates. No one has ever been so many men as this man, who like the Egyptian Proteus could exhaust all the guises of reality. At times he would leave a confession hidden away in some corner of his work, certain that it would not be deciphered; Richard affirms that in his person he plays the part of many and Iago claims with curious words "I am not what I am." The fundamental identity of existing, dreaming and acting inspired famous passages of his.

For twenty years he persisted in that controlled hallucination, but one morning he was suddenly gripped by the tedium and the terror of being so many kings who die by the sword and so many suffering lovers who converge, diverge and melodiously expire. That very day he arranged to sell his theater. Within a week he had returned to his native village, where he recovered the trees and rivers of his childhood and did not relate them to the others his muse had celebrated, illustrious with mythological allusions and Latin terms. He had to be someone; he was a retired impresario who had made his fortune and concerned himself with loans, lawsuits and petty usury. It was in this character that he dictated the arid will and testament known to us, from which he deliberately excluded all traces of pathos or literature. His friends from London would visit his retreat and for them he would take up again his role as a poet...

- Jorge Luis Borges


[Communique: 11.23.02]

Sometimes I write things and forget them too quickly. I wrote this in January but I'm still looking. Since then I have been to a few places like this, but everything still lies ahead. The details of this vision still make me thrill.

Who / what is the teacher / teaching that I am looking for?

Some kind of alchemist working in a dark space full of color. The leader of a band, but the band has matured so that each disciple embodies a different study, having gone deeper down a path of which the master knows only the beginning. In the laboratory of the master are telephones, FX boxes, manuscripts of the old cosmologies, recent works of theater anthropology, copies of the New York Times and the Chinese equivalent, a titanium powerbook with DSL connection, buckets of paint, sculptures of garbage, a video camera, many pages of scripting both handwritten and typed, maps and diagrams for future projects, and of course a long dark empty space into which all these elements may be introduced. And then there is the discipline, some kind of (meta)physical alchemy, some arcane structure requiring one or three or six or twelve hours a day of constant devotion, a sort of branching hieroglyph containing many parts, none of which seem at first to be connected. The work of the pure body, almost naked, trained to tranfer energy, comes after the work of the deep emotions, the group dynamics, the crying and the laughing, and before the work of the intellect, the maps and charts, the discussions and arguments. Blend in objects and spatial design, add the truth about the world and the myths of forgotten peoples, some radical politics and some truly foreign histories, a sense of the absurd, a grudging acquaintance with fascism, an understanding of evil and of good, a love of the simply human, and always: the Work. How to make this work, how to find this teacher, how to become this Prophet -- that is the Work. To discover the nature of the Work, that is the Work. To produce to the Work, that is also the Work.


[Communique: 11.22.02]

It had never occurred to me until today that "The Two Towers" could refer either to the upcoming Tolkein movie or to the late World Trade Center. What a strange coincidence embedded in our cultural moment. I am picturing Sauran and Saruman lodged in the top floors of neighboring skyscrapers, lobbing vicious magic missiles at one another until each of them manages a "summon winged metal demon" spell that brings both towers crashing to the ground. The fantasy on top of the reality, like a cartoon superimposed on a photograph. Like when you see that a friend's shadow has the shape of werewolf. Is this evil? Is it art?

Saw two masterpieces tonight. I am not kidding.

1) Hibiki / Sankai Juku @ BAM

Day and night in a rock garden. The rocks breathe, they come alive, and they bleed. At night they wake as children, and in the morning they go back to sleep.

The curtain call was so beautiful, it was the most beautiful part, and these were the most beautiful men in the world. What a trance they were in! And they stood waking, could not move yet, could not comprehend, and then slowly understood: Our applause. And so raised a single hand, stood blinking, mouths open, like fish, like aliens, with music like at the end of "Death in Venice." I have never seen people look so stoic and newborn at the same time, standing there noble as princes, one of them as if about to cry, as if the world were new...

It was the most androgynous work I have ever seen. What is it about deserts?

2) The House With The Ocean View / Marina Abramovic @ Sean Kelly

For Marina...

AM I HALLUCINATING YOU?
SHE COVERS HER FACE WITH HER HANDS --
SHE HAS BEEN HERE FOR 8 DAYS
TO INDUCE A SACRED TIME

AND I, IN MY WALKING,
HITTING THE STREETS -- A JOB --
WATCHING, LIVING SO QUICKLY
TEARING THROUGH TIME LIKE PAPER

ALL THIS TIME --
SHE HAS BEEN HERE, WAITING
JUST TO WAIT.
TO INDUCE A SACRED TIME.

NO FOOD STRETCHING THE MINUTES --
NO BOOK TO DIGEST
NO TALKING
JUST WATER FOR THOUGHT
AND A VIEW OF THE OCEAN
THAT SWIMMINGLY WORLD OF GUESTS
A HALLUCINATION -- STARING BACK --

WHO SAYS SHE DOESN'T BELIEVE ANYMORE?
THIS OLD WOMAN YOUNG WITH GRASPING TIME
TIME, HERSELF, OLD FRIENDS
EACH MOMENT A FRAIL LOVER

AM I HALLUCINATING YOU?
SHE DOESN'T ASK.


[Communique: 11.19.02]

9:47 - Time to go to sleep.

The new job is hard, but I think I can crack it.

Speaking at Location 1 tonight, Bonnie Marranca said that even after all these years, the Wooster Group remains the final word on postmodern performance work. If Brecht can be seen as the next step after Stanislavsky, and if the Wooster Group can be seen as the step after that, then no one has yet produced a further step. She also said that Reza Abdoh (with Dar A Luz) would have been the one if he had not died in 1995 at the young age of 32. Norman Frisch, sitting in the audience, agreed.

Now that's a fucking challenge if I've ever heard one.

Welcome to the Reconstruction.

- Your Momma


[Communique: 11.18.02]

New job today. Plus neverland at Flux. I am exhausted.

For Hakim Bey:

But chaos is not easy to find. It isn't hard either. To chaote -- a verb -- is an act of style & will joined together like two serpents fucking. Merely to surprise is not chaos, nor is going naked -- to hurt is certainly not chaos. Your pistols of revolt are my phallic punishments of empire. Your pleasantry-cracking jokes are my weapons of (social) law enforcement. Your free spirit is my cop. Your party's aftermath is my burnt and desolate battlefield. So watch your works.

You speak of slender terrorists wolfing the mundanity of happenstance "down here." But what of those fat little terrorists who wolf even the angels? What about the fat in all of us -- the chaos that has not been burned away by the flames of anorexia?

What is truly beautiful can never be pretty, because prettiness is a form of ugliness. Tell that to the fat girls and their nervous mothers. Tell that to the wild children who stumble over their words and don't even know how to masturbate, let alone how to love. The real thing doesn't look like the version they show on TV. The real thing is wet and bulbous, and coered in the warts and pimples of honest living. The real thing is a messy primordial soup, an eternal polysexual menses, a real body. Weight is the courage to exist.


[Communique: 11.16.02]

Quick to despair, quick to hope, slow to build and slow to lose.

Directing is like nothing else except being in love.

The surrealism in a work is in direct proportion to the efforts the artist has made to embrace the whole psychphysical field, of which consciousness is only a small fraction.

- Andre Breton

On Tuesday I went with Timmy and Casey and Marina and Rich to Greenwich, Connecticut, to watch the entire second half of Twin Peaks. Another thing that happened then was that me and Marina spent a good fifteen minutes trying to figure out the relationship between linear, polynomial, exponential, and logarithmic functions, and especially which one applies to decibels. Meanwhile a cat drank water from the sink and its eyes glowed green. There is a video here.

On Wednesday we finished Twin Peaks and I went to sleep.

On Thursday my mom came to town, and I got a strange job selling promo tickets on the street for the New York Comedy Club. I start next week. I'll let you know how it goes.

On Friday neverland went to shambles and my heart was wrenched out of my chest. Then I met with a mysterious character named Mr. Joe who eased some of my troubles and sprouted a few new ones.

Today we rehearsed on the roof, in my apartment, in the basement.

Today everything is okay.


[Communique: 11.11.02]

This past year I have often written that I feel shallow. Right now I feel deep. It's because of neverland. Rehearsals are intense, unfamiliar, not like any "directing" I've known in the past. We are probing real issues, we are creating something strange. Sometimes I think the whole thing will shudder and fall apart before it gets off the ground. There is an ongoing discussion about safety and how it relates to the representation of violence in the work. When I speak in rehearsals, I feel as though I am swimming through a mysterious lake, dark and unknown, glowing from the deep.

Timmy says: Making theater about suffering can't mean suffering yourself. Making theater about war is not an act of violence. That wouldn't be fair.

And of course, of course he is right.

And yet: How dangerous it is to make theater about suffering without suffering yourself. How can you be responsible to the material without empathy? But to empathize with suffering -- who would choose such a life? Who is that wants to act out misery by being miserable?

Doing theater about celebration is not the same as celebrating. Doing theater about war is not the same as making a war. Theater about violence is not more violence. What is theater? Why make work about darkness? What are we doing all this for?


[Communique: 11.09.02]

In Sarajevo, from what I've heard, they put candles in basements and do theater, while from outside they're hearing sniper shots and people are getting shot. Theater is the only thing for them, to keep them from going mad.

- Reza Abdoh

Some people, whose opinion I respect deeply, find the writing I do on this page to be pretentious, boring, self-centered, self-aggrandizing, and annoying. Many of my own voices tell me the same thing.

It's just a reminder. It's just more pressure. It doesn't mean I get to stop writing. It's just another raise of the stakes. I don't know shit about Sarajevo, or about Reza Abdoh. I quote these things not to claim them but to remind myself that I don't know shit. It's when I think I know shit that I become complacent. It's when I live in my own little world that the work can afford to be shy, shallow, and pretty. I read nonfiction that I can't understand to remind myself how small I am. I believe, perhaps mistakenly, that that is how one gets to the deeper work -- under the pressure of history, under the weight of suffering, with the responsibility of joy. Of course sometimes I am only pretending, but it's the only way I know to get through to the other side. This is my only defense.

First rehearsal for neverland today.


[Communique: 11.06.02]

I don't know where to begin...

PHOTOGRAPH is over. The after-party was the best time I've ever had in a club. NEVERLAND is cast and the work starts Saturday. On Monday I worked twelve hours at HERE. On Tuesday I worked fifteen hours for the exit-polling Voter News Service. This morning I was disappointed to find that the fantastic new creative community center in my neighborhood is out of my price range for the time being. Then I spent all evening with Yelena, and now my head is buzzing with ideas and new determinations for NEVERLAND. We ate salad and rabbit stew, and I borrowed two books, the one about Reza Abdoh and the one by Julian Beck. Yelena is married. Yelena is pregnant. Yelena is Yelena.

In between all this, other adventures were had.

What can I say? The form must come from the sources, just as the contents do. The six "neutral" viewpoints must be discarded in favor of viewpoints tailored to the specific project. The ideas must determine the structure. The material must determine the ideas. The action must genuine. The work must be real. The ticking of the clock. Tank tops and blood capsules. I am just getting started. Everything I thought I knew is out the window. It needs to be buried before it can return. Dirty jeans and a tape recorder and a Polaroid camera.

What can I say? I am still looking for a job. I am still looking for a place to rehearse. Brad Rothbart from the RAT-list called me up today because when he was in New York ten years ago he worked with Judith Malina, he hung out with Steven Ben Israel in the Moondance Diner, and he shared a stage with Ani Difranco. He is good friends with Tea Alagic.

That's why I put it out there. Looking for people. Looking for fellow travelers.

For years they couldn't bring themselves to use the word 'improvising' - they'd call it messing about, having a bit of a run around in the space, playing around. In any case of the best of these 'improvisations' would start without anyone noticing - during lunch break perhaps when someone might get up and start messing about in the performance area - waving a gun maybe, trying out some text. Then someone else would join in and someone else. Before long they'd be somewhere else too - pushing the material into unexpected territory.

- Certain Fragments, by Tim Etchells
Forced Entertainment


[Communique: 11.01.02]

I have been reading the DOGMA 95 cinematic "vow of chastity." I can see two fundamental ways in which experimental theater can respond to this innovation in experimental cinema... Minimal or maximal. Deconstructive or reconstructive. Richard Maxwell or Elevator Repair Service. Brecht or Artaud. KARMA or MAGMA.

DOGMA - KARMA - MAGMA

KARMA and MAGMA are not mutually exclusive. A few of the rules seem to be contradictory, but other rules are the same. Most of them are compatible in one way or another, and I think my ideal theater subscribes to both. Of course, most theater in America has nothing to do with either KARMA or MAGMA.

And for God's sake -- I'm not trying to revolutionize theater by myself! Please contact me with comments -- or if you actually MAKE a piece that fits into one of these definitions -- and we can change the world together.

PS -- The October Text has been archived.



vermilion's text = journal of a rootless cosmopolitan
all text by bspatz
return to anagnorisis

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