THIS STORM IS WHAT WE CALL PROGRESS

June 19 – July 20, 2008

A young man stumbles into a dusty old recording studio run by an enigmatic old woman and her beautiful assistant. Here he is drawn into an ancient and powerful world of Jewish mysticism and Kabbalistic ritual and discovers that he may be something more than he had ever imagined.

SEASON 8 was sponsored in part by Mark & Cindy Aron, The Dobranski Foundation and Pete Miller & Sara Cormeny.

“The world premiere of Jason Grote’s “This Storm Is What We Call Progress” is both mind-blowing and a bit mind-numbing, but as modeling clay for a troupe that likes to get its mitts on provocative, idea-crammed and still-evolving theater, it’s primo material.”

FEATURING

Sara Barker
Rena Cherry Brown
Karl Miller

Designers

Sound Matthew Frederick
Set Robbie Hayes
Lighting David C. Ghatan
Costumes Frank Labovitz
Props Francoise Bastien

STAFF

Stage Manager Kyle Jean Fisher
ASM Alex Aki
Fight Choreograhy Casey Kaleba
Asst. Set Designer Hannah Crowell
Asst. Lighting Designer Tracy Wertheimer
Technical Director Jon Reynolds
Master Electrician Brian S. Allard

PRODUCERS

Randy Baker
Jenny McConnell Frederick
Associate Producers David C. Ghatan, Debra Kim Sivigny, Catherine Tripp

PRESS

"Junpei’s magical-realist story—about a shy banker who must aid a giant magical-realist frog in combat against a giant magical-realist worm—provides the evening’s play-within-a-play. Galati’s script preserves luxurious passages of Murakami’s (translated) prose, a sensual pleasure as performed by each member of the company. The design team, meanwhile, has created a visual and aural environment to match the haunted elegance of the words: Newspaper pages and homemade missing-persons flyers paper the theater space’s walls, while bits of detritus—plush toys, plastic bottles, 45-RPM records—hang from the ceiling. Ingeniously, when an actor needs a prop, it’s usually hanging just overhead.
Dylan Myers displays an expansive physicality as the frog who summons the banker, Katagiri, on his heroic mission. (If you’ve ever wondered what those thin-soled rubber athletic shoes with individual toes are for, the answer is: amphibian wear.) Maboud Ebrahimzadeh is double-cast as Katagiri and the pal who steals away Junpei’s love. You pity his characters differently. The same prop—a black-lace curtain, basically—convincingly evokes the worm the frog must fight and later, a terrifying hallucination of an insect invasion of Katagiri’s wounded body. It’s strong, stirring stuff—a modern fable with an oblique moral. It enchants us like a dream and kicks like a nightmare."
Washington City Paper
"It would be too glib to say this is a story of healing. It is something better: a story about ordinary people living their lives, through difficulties. Director Randy Baker’s instincts with Frank Galati’s good adaptation are superb; all of his actors give subtle and precise renderings of their characters, full of great knowingness and understanding… In short, this play has been Rorschachisized, which is to say delivered with such speed, punch and precision that it is impossible not to accept the most outlandish developments."
DC Theatre Scene
"Baker’s production does well to capture the loneliness at the heart of the parallel plots, thanks in part to tender performances by Daniel J. Corey and Maboud Ebrahimzadeh. Rorschach is exemplary at the edgy-­little-theater business; the material is dark and daring, and the acting is generally sure… The shoestring design is smart, driven by Elisheba Ittoop’s understated, moody sound and Stephanie P. Freed’s warm, shadowy lights."
The Washington POst