La Luna
Conceived and directed by Witold Izdebski. With
ensemble cast.
Teatr Cogitatur at Chopin Theatre (see Touring
shows)
By Christopher Piatt, Theatre Editor
Time Out Chicago - August
11th 2005
We have little basis for comparison in Chicago for what Poland’s
visiting Teatr Cogitatur is doing in La Luna, an excellent performance
piece comprised of little more than a series of strikingly lit
stage pictures. Even with our army of artists that excel at visual
spectacle and physical theater- from Redmoon to Plasticene to
Mary Zimmerman – nothing in town looks or feels like this
staggering collage. And even with our boatload of fine, DJ-influenced
sound designers and theatrical composers, nothing in these parts
sounds like Tomasz Kalwak’s accomplished score, which fuses
fashion runway techno, a drunken jazz trumpet and haunting chamber
music and filters it all through a scratchy record needle. What’s
more even though we’ve seen endless redoubtable local companies
reinvent the Chopin Theatre’s space, Teatr Cogitatur somehow
demolishes it completely, using only a little stage fog, some
carefully placed spotlights and honest-to-God blackouts (a real
rarity) to create an abyss that seems 100 yards deep.
Perhaps beyond our borders there’s an abundance
of work just like this, but it’s doubtful; every moment
in this tantalizing 45-minute flash feels singular. There’s
very little narrative structure to latch onto (although we do
know that it’s about the troubled lives of four urban Bohemians),
so instead all we can do is revel in the marvelous, stark imagery,
which is executed with so much technical precision it’s
basically a master class. If you’re willing to take the
risk on this unusual offering – and you absolutely should – Teatr
Cogitatur will gladly show you how stage pictures, when correctly
rendered, can become the wholly environmental liver version of
a flip book for adults.