Chin Music

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by John Rezmerski

Director
Ron Duffy

SET

Director's Note-Chin Music

Theatrically staging material designed for another medium provides a unique challenge. When I directed the original production of Old Man Brunner Country, Leo Dangel's poetry, I decided to mount it against the deserted Wolf Creek Country Store because it created for me a meeting place for the memories of the characters who presented the narrative. In working with John Calvin Rezmerski's Chin Music the challenge was different. The concept of setting it in a present time setting seemed more fitting. It was determined that John would be the presenter, Rezmerski doing Rezmerski, but he would perform the material through a fictional character, Calvin, both for a remote radio listening audience and for a "studio" theatre audience. The style seemed not only expediently appropriate, but provided both the interesting dimensions of a here and there, and a then and now. Concurrently, it also gave the work a dramatic backdrop for the poetic narrative— things were about to change, all that would be heard would not be heard again, and the radio Calvin, after tonight, would be seen no more.

—Ron Duffy

THE CAST

Calvin John Calvin Rezmerski
Voices: Engineer Ron Duffy
Myron Garrit Zayic
Aunt Piggy Colleen Nuessmeier

Setting: KCHN-FM


There will be one 15 minute intermission


Boxelder Bug Variations

adapted from the work of Bill Holm
by Sally Childs

Music composed by Bill Holm and Robert E. Hindel

Ensemble (left to right): Suzanna Winter, Terry Lynn Carlson, Jeremy Poetker, Monica Heuser, Beth Desotelle, and JP Fitzgibbons

Directed collaboratively by Sally Childs, Billy Kimmel, Elizabeth M. Desotelle

Director's Note: Boxelder Bug Variations
In 1987 1 adapted and staged Boxelder Bug Variations with the help of choreographer Lewis Whitlock, composer Bob Hindel, six actors and Bill Holm who appeared in the piece himself. The piece was formal, elegant, presentational, and highly experimental. Now, as Artistic Director of the Jon Hassler Theater, I am collaborating with a team of three other artists-Choreographers Elizabeth (Beth) M. Desotelle, Billy Kimmel and Musician Jeremy Poetker to create something less formal, elegant, and presentational but still highly experimental-"A Meditation on an Idea in Language and Music." Describing the result of our collaboration is as difficult as Holm says it is in his book:

"The material of any work of art-a chair, an afghan, an equestrian statue, a waltz-is so amorphous and mysterious that probably only a psychologist, an executioner, or a full professor would be fool enough to try to name it, or even describe it in its own language. An artist, on the other hand, gives it a body, and a body, since is exists, is true. A boxelder bug is as satisfactory a body as purple, or a saxophone, or French, or obsidian."

None of us are psychologists, executioners or full professors and so we have barged ahead, taken the body provided by Holm and transformed it into a stage work for six actor/dancer/singers, one keyboard artist, and 225 audience members (and some leftover bugs still hanging out from last summer). Our aim is to entertain, using Holm's surprising off-beat images to spur our imaginations.

We start with a simple statement, "consider the boxelder bug." Then we look at how "we, too, dislike them" (not many of us love bugs), and finally bring it together with "a man and a woman and a boxelder bug are one." Using a range of dance styles to create the "Shaker Bug", the "Boxelder Bug Gavotte", the "Boxelder Bug Tango," the "Boxelder Bug Blues" and a Manhattan Transfer style Do- wop in "The Boxelder Bug Prays", six
actor/dancers bring Bill Holm's ideas alive. Embedded in all the music is the boxelder bug motif which is built from the musical pitches in the name: Boxelder.Bug. Holm plays with this idea musically much like Bach is thought to have done with his name in The Art of Fugue.

If this sounds complicated, it really isn't, and it all comes clear on stage (and matters not at all) once the action starts. The complicated part took place offstage when four artists got into a dialogue about how to do this, with four voices interrupting and bumping into each other. Billy Kimmel says, "This is the most challenging project of my career." These artistic challenges have resulted in a cleverly staged entertainment, wherein humans, who have "too many of them plug-in things," learn to live more peacefully with the bug. The bug has only one fault and asks that we "forgive him only for being so many."

—Sally Childs

SET

Productions Shots

THE CAST

Jeremy Poetker, Pianist
Kevin Griffin
Suzanna Winter
Beth Desotelle*

* Member of Actors' Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States, appearing under a Small Professional Theater contract.

Set Designer Lighting Designer
Erica Zaffarano Paul Epton
Costume Designer Stage Manager
Jeannie Millett Alva Crom
Choreographer Music Director
Elizabeth M. Desotelle*
Billy Kimmel
Jeremy Poetker

Rural America Arts Partnership, Jon Hassler Theater Staff

Executive Director Ken Flies   Light Board Operator Kellie Stoltz
Box Office Manager Will Harrington   Production Assistant Ryan DeRoos, Luke Therneau
Facilities Manager Don Schultz   Concessions Millie Binder Flies
Finance Dean Harrington   Costume Assistant Anna Bartley
Graphics Mike Nadolske   Stage Carpenter Don Binder
House Manager Sally Harrington      
Assistant Stage Manager Larry Roupe      

 

PRODUCTION SHOTS