Before his untimely death in 1972 at age 47, eccentric
Lexington, KY photographer Ralph Eugene Meatyard was famous for
transforming ordinary street scenes and rooms in derelict buildings
and factories into surrealistic compositions by shooting them from
unusual angles in which the lighting appeared almost supernatural.
But Meatyard is, perhaps, best known for peopling his photos with
family and friends wearing masks. The masks not only hid the faces
of his amateur models, but also made his photos creepy.
Japanese-American playwright Naomi Iizuka’s At
the Vanishing Point, playing May 30-June 3 and
June 6-9 at Manbites Dog Theater in Durham, NC, was inspired
by the almost mythical ambience of Meatyard’s shots of
the rundown Butchertown neighborhood of Louisville, KY. This
provocative multimedia production, superlatively staged by
Manbites Dog artistic director and Theater Studies at Duke
faculty member Jeff Storer, employs a striking series of Meatyard-style
photographs by Alan Dehmer to punctuate a series of tragic
and comic stories told by Butchertown’s edgy Southern
Gothic residents, who have fallen on hard times as their neighborhood
factories and homes have gone into a decline while their neighbors'
standard of living seems to be steadily improving.
Derrick Ivey, who plays an optician-turned-photographer
like Meatyard, starts the show with a slide show that he uses to
illustrate the importance of point of view and the optical tricks
a photographer employs to transform the ordinary into the extraordinary.
Ivey gives eloquent voice to the explanation of arcane matters
related to photography, such as the importance of focus and framing,
what the human eye sees and what it misses that photos can reveal,
how photos stimulate ideas in the brain, etc.
Marcia Edmundson adds a quartet of gritty performances,
but is perhaps most memorable as two sisters, Maddy and Maudie,
who took decidedly different paths in their pursuit of happiness.
Michael O’Foghludha is most effective as Pete, a highly strung
tour guide at the Edison House, where the famous inventor lived
while he worked for the telegraph company in Louisville. David
Berberian gives a pair of gritty performances as a two rough men
who slaughter hogs, Madeleine Lambert adds a poignant
portrait of a plucky blind girl named Nora
Holtz, and singer and violinist Eliza Bagg provides haunting musical
accompaniment during the show’s
dramatic scenes.
Child actors Garrett M. Stein-Seroussi, Jonah Klever,
and Claire Catotti play younger versions of some of the adult characters,
as well as other youngsters whose hopes and dreams are forever
stunted by the decline of Butchertown.
Director Jeff Storer and his highly talented cast
and team of designers make the Manbites Dog Theater presentation
of At the Vanishing Point a winner by artfully interweaving
the stories of the Forgotten Men and Women of a rapidly deteriorating
neighborhood in Louisville. Photographic designer Alan Dehmer,
set designer Jonathan Blackwell, lighting designer Chuck Catotti,
and costume designer Dierdre Shipman give Butchertown the gritty
look of a down-at-the-heels section of town that has already seen
its best days and will never see the
like again, and musical
director Julie C. Oliver and sound designer Adam Sampieri create
a complimentary soundscape with choice snippets of folk, jazz,
and even classical music that underscore the emotions expressed
by the various characters in this unforgettable play.
Manbites Dog Theater presents At the
Vanishing Point Wednesday-Saturday,
May 30-June 2, at 8:15 p.m.; Sunday, June 3, at 3:15 p.m.; and
Wednesday-Saturday, June 6-9, at 8:15 p.m. at 703 Foster St., Durham,
North Carolina. $10 Wednesday and Thursday and $15 Friday-Sunday,
except $8 Student Rush tickets. 919/682-3343 (telephone reservations
for MDT voucher holders only) or http://www.tix.com/Schedule.asp?OrganizationNumber=150.
Manbites Dog Theater: http://www.manbitesdogtheater.org/168/.
Naomi Iizuka: http://www.dramadance.ucsb.edu/people_facultyprofile.php?ResearcherID=140
[inactive 11/08] and http://www.newdramatists.org/naomi_iizuka.htm [inactive 11/10].
Ralph Eugene Meatyard (1925-72):
http://www.masters-of-photography.com/M/meatyard/meatyard_articles1.html
[inactive 2/08] AND http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/17/arts/design/17meat.html?ex=1180497600 &en=7946fb3bf093fcd3&ei=5070.