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XXIn
1975, I came to New York to work as a "go-fer" for an OBIE
award-winning director at the Chelsea Westside Theater. I knew little
about Off-Broadway and a little about "Experimental Theater"
(courtesy of The Drama Review). During the fall of 1975 I saw dozens
of productions all over the city: Broadway, Off-Broadway, even Shakespeare
at Juilliard.
XXOne night
I went to see Richard Foreman's Rhoda in Potatoland in a loft on
Lower Broadway, on the edge of a new neighborhood, SoHo. On that night,
my whole orientation as a theater artist shifted.
XXWhy? Because
for all the theater I had seen, all over New York, only minutes of any
particular production seemed alive (Exception: the young Richard Gere
in Shepard's Cowboy Mouth). I longed for intensity, fun, manic
energy, insanity, brains; "performers" instead of "actors".
I wanted theater that was more than the sum of its parts. I wanted event.
Funny thing was, I didn't know what was missing until I saw it. After
that, I couln't go back. Eventually, I moved downtown and tried to make
(in Foreman's words) "rigorous" theater art. I totally credit
Richard Foreman with changing the diretion of my theater life.
XXSince then, I have
seen a number of his creations and have been enthralled every time. They
are beyond imitation, almost beyond description or analysis. They are
fantastic machines emanating from the head of Richard Foreman.
eric
bogosian You've mentioned, in your
manifestos on theater, that an actor must have hostility towards the audience.
That was an original point of view in the seventies, but now it's turned
inside out. It is fashionable to be aggressive and indigestible. How does
this affect your use of hostility, your jarring, aggressive style?
RICHARD FOREMAN I
know how easy it is for me to want to love, to want the caress of reassurance;
and how quickly that can deteriorate into not being alert through all
the difficulties, all the stumbling, all the problems that force me to
invent. I am personally happiest when I am forced to solve a problem.
The aggression onstage has to do with that. I want the performer and the
performance to give the audience the feeling that there are problems to
be solved. And I've made the solution available, somehow, on the stage.
That is the excitement, the delight and the pleasure. Personally, I am
a very unaggressive person. When I was young, I'd see Sam Shepard occasionally
giving interviews, and he seemed like such a cussed, intransigent bastard.
I thought to myself, "God, I wish I could be tough," instead
of Mr. Niceguy, which is my personality. (continue)
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