March 29, 2008, Chapel Hill, NC: Carolina
Performing Arts at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill has brought to campus Still... Life: An Exploration
of a Killing State: North Carolina, a locally written work
barely a year old. Members of the Raleigh-based The
Justice Theater Project originally premiered this
play last April at the Cardinal Gibbons Fine and Performing Arts
Center. In association with UNC's
Communication Studies Department, the JTP has since developed and
refined the work. The original members of JTP who worked to write
the original script — including Carole Marcotte, Lester Leigh
Holmes, David Henderson, John Honeycutt, LaMark Wright, Thomas Mauney,
and Deb Royals — all feel it is now in its completed form.
This revised version of Still... Life, which attempts
to examine the Death Penalty in North Carolina from both sides, pro
and con, opened March 27th for a two-weekend run at Studio 6 in UNC's
Swain Hall. The JTP is pleased and excited to have UNC's Joseph
Megel direct this production, because the work was refined during
2006-07 in Megel's Adaptation Seminar.
Carolina Performing Arts' 2007-08 "Criminal/Justice" series
is itself a project that examines the Death Penalty. It has been
awarded a grant from the Association of Performing Arts Presenters
Creative Campus Innovations Grant Program, which is a component of
the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. JTP's Still... Life is
presented as a part of this project. Given the tragic events of late
at UNC and other campuses, involving the deaths of students, and
given that the media is maintaining a high-profile investigation
of those accused of the acts, Still... Life is
a remarkably apt work to be presenting at this particular time.
The members of the JTP who wrote the work did so after extensive
field work and research into murders in North Carolina, interviewing
survivors of both the victim's and the felon's families.
The result is a multimedia work that involves heated debate, first-hand
accounts, and slides depicting exactly what takes place at a state-sponsored
execution. Working backwards from the moment the death is pronounced
by the warden, we see — in reverse chronological sequence — the
stages that each execution goes through.
It is necessary here to indicate that, in no uncertain terms, The
Justice Theater Project as a whole is against the Death Penalty and
has worked through a series of projects to bring public awareness
to bear on the practice. So, while the voices of those who defend
the practice are clearly voiced, the point being made is that executions,
being as they are substantially biased by the courts, are not in
any way humane or justified, despite objections to the contrary by
the political appointees who defend it. In North Carolina, executions
fall disproportionately toward non-whites and the poor, who cannot
afford expert defense. In the courts, defense attorneys who have
tried to plead against the Death Penalty in special cases have been
met with stonewalling and deaf ears by those high in the government
who might lend a hand in turning death to life in prison.
An ensemble cast of six performs Still... Life.
Deb Royals, artistic director of JTP; Anissa Clarke, a UNC graduate
teaching
fellow; and Kimberly Hardy, a communications graduate student, are
joined onstage by local actor and JTP member David Henderson; Raleigh
actor John Honeycutt; and actor/comic/firefighter Joseph Callender.
As this cast moves quickly and smoothly about the stage, they recreate
several different scenarios that address the Death Penalty from the
points of view of those who have lost a loved one to murder and those
who have had a loved one executed by the state, and also from both
sides as they interact with each other in the ongoing argument. Meanwhile
the crew uses a staggered backdrop of "baby-blue sheets" (also
used during state executions) to project the faces, families, and
victims of violent death in North Carolina, both illegal and "state-supported."
While the ensemble works exceptionally well together, there are
still one or two singular performances that stand out. While each
individual performs several characters, the Reverend (David Henderson)
who has never before worked in the penal system tells us of his first
execution and how this term in the N.C. Department of Correction
has affected him. Meanwhile, we watch the execution of Harvey Lee
Greene (Joseph Callender), who was convicted of killing his aunt
while he was high. While the execution takes place, his lawyers tell
us the harrowing tale of how they attempted to seek clemency from
a government very disinclined to listen, despite the recanting of
a psychologist for the prosecution who testified without being given
all the facts by the prosecuting attorney. Each of these characters
is superbly presented and tightly controlled by the actor.
This work is designed to teach us the incongruities of how North
Carolina has specifically misapplied the Death Penalty. The argument
is that because North Carolina — before a moratorium was declared
that stopped execution in the state — cannot seem to use the
Death Penalty in a fair and compassionate manner, it should
be eliminated from the justice system. This debate is still taking
place in the Legislature. But there is a growing voice among the
people of North Carolina that cannot see how the taking of a second
life can in any way provide closure for the survivors of murder victims. "State
condoned murder" seems, to this growing segment, a very
sad result of a justice system that is, itself, in need of life support. Still...
Life graphically
presents this seeming contradiction in the state judicial system,
in the hope that public opinion can be brought to bear on the elimination
of the Death Penalty in North Carolina.
Carolina Performing
Arts, in collaboration with The Justice Theatre Project, presents Still...
Life: An Exploration of a Killing State: North Carolina Saturday,
April 5, at 8 p.m. and Sunday, April 6, at 2 p.m. in Swain Hall
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. $15
($12 students and seniors). 919/843-3333 or click here [inactive
9/09]. Note: After
the April 6th performance, there will be a discussion facilitated
by Rene Alexander Craft of the UNC-Chapel Hill Department
of Communication Studies and a reception with the actors. Carolina
Performing Arts: http://www.carolinaperformingarts.org/.
The Justice Theatre Project: http://www.thejusticetheaterproject.org/.