Are any of us unscarred by high school? As a shy teenager who split
my three high school years almost evenly between Grimsley in Greensboro
and Broughton in Raleigh, and felt very much like an outsider at
both places, I watched the Raleigh
Ensemble Players’ Southeastern
premiere of Columbinus, written by Stephen
Karam and PJ Paparelli for the United States Theatre Project, with
a shock of recognition that opened old wounds that I thought had
healed decades ago. No doubt other audience members experienced similar
flashbacks.
On one level, Columbinus dramatizes the April 20, 1999,
shootings at Columbine High School in Colorado. But on another level
the play chronicles the stresses of today’s high school students
as more and more erupting school shootings make headlines from coast
to coast.
The first act starts with an average school day in which the in-crowd
lords it over the outcasts, but somewhere along the way typical teenage
angst evolves into homicidal rage for two misfits named Eric Harris
(Ryan Brock) and Dylan Klebold (Jesse Gephart), who wreak a bloody
vengeance on the callous classmates who abused them and their fellow
students who merely stood by and never tried to stop the daily humiliations
that oddball kids like Harris and Klebold suffer. Act Two recreates
the school shootings, their planning and their aftermath, in such
chilling detail — with slaps on wood and metal substituting
for gunshots — that it is increasingly hard to watch without
tears.
When the show begins, there are eight actors playing high school
stereotypes: Ryan Brock (Freak), Jesse Gephart (Loner), Whitney Griffin
(Faith), Lormarev Jones (Rebel), Chris Milner (Prep), Eric Morales
(Jock), Megan Navarette (Perfect), and Justin Schwartz (AP, which
I assume stands for Advanced Placement). By the end of Act One, Brock
and Gephart have morphed into Harris and Klebold, stockpiling pistols,
shotguns, and automatic weapons and making crude bombs with the expressed
purpose of eclipsing Texas-tower sniper Charles Whitman’s record
for school shootings — and then killing themselves as the cops
close in.
Not only has REP artistic director C. Glen Matthews assembled a
crackerjack cast for Columbinus, but he has molded them
into an eloquent and expressive ensemble with Brock brilliant as
Harris, the military brat subject to volcanic rages, and Gephart
terrific as Klebold, a goofy loner who becomes Harris’ sidekick
and then his partner in this unspeakable crime.
Every other cast member creates several truly unforgettable characters — Columbine
kids, parents, teachers, counselors, and law-enforcement types — all
awash in the tsunami of vengeance that roared through Columbine High
on April 20th. Some succumb, some survive, but all do it eloquently
and with extraordinary depth of feeling.
While Brock and Gephart undergo truly frightening transformations
from at-risk students to mass murderers who videotaped their suicide
notes to taunt everyone who escape their rampage, the six stellar
members of the supporting cast breathe life into dozens of other
characters. Technical director and lighting designer Thomas Mauney,
set designer and properties mistress Miyuki Su, costume designer
LeGrande Smith, media designer Bridget Harron, media engineer Larry
Evans, fight director Jason A. Armit, and sound designer Elisheba
Ittoop combine with director Glen Matthews and his all-star cast
to make Columbinus a must-see drama. It is hard to watch,
but impossible to watch unscathed.
Raleigh Ensemble Players presents Columbinus Thursday-Saturday,
Oct. 18-20 and 25-27, at 8 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 21, at 7 p.m. at
Artspace Gallery 2, 201 E. Davie St., Raleigh, North Carolina.
$17 ($14 students with ID, seniors, and active-duty military personnel).
919/832-9607, TTY: 919/835-0624 or http://www.realtheatre.org/box_office.html.
Note: There
will be a Fully Accessible Performance on Oct. 18th, with audio description
by Arts Access, Inc..
Raleigh Ensemble Players: http://www.realtheatre.org/plays.html.
Columbinus: http://www.unitedstatestheatreproject.org/columbinus/index.html [inactive
8/09] (United States Theatre Project) and http://www.nytw.org/columbinus_info.asp (New
York Theatre Workshop). Study Guide: http://www.unitedstatestheatreproject.org/documents/columbinusStudyGuide.doc
[inactive 8/09].
A Columbine Site: http://www.acolumbinesite.com/.
Tragedy at Columbine (The Daily Camera of Boulder,
CO): http://www.boulderdailycamera.com/shooting/index.html
[inactive 4/09].
Text of the Columbine Report (courtesy The Daily Camera):
http://www.boulderdailycamera.com/shooting/report.html
[inactive 4/09].