The
Petaluma River Anthology – a Review
by Steve Gilford

It wasn’t long after I moved to Petaluma,
seventeen years ago before I learned that the Cinnabar Theater was a
remarkable cultural resource. Any ideas that it was just an enthusiastic
community theater were swept away by the quality of their productions. However, I wasn’t prepared to
have one of my most
moving theatrical experiences take place
at a performance of young actors at a Fairground but that is what happened at
the “World Premiere” performance of Cinnabar Theater’s Young Rep’s original
production, “Petaluma River Anthology” held at the Sonoma-Marin Fairgrounds on
July Fourth.
The play’s name is a reference to the “Spoon
River Anthology” by Edgar Lee Masters originally published nearly 100 years
ago. It was a collection of short biographies of the citizens of a town called
Spoon River. Originally a book, it has been adapted for the stage and is still
often produced in community theaters. In “Spoon River”, the characters are both
fictional and deceased. In the “Petaluma River Anthology”, the characters most
certainly are not. They are alive, vital, and deeply woven into the fabric
of the community.
On the surface, the idea for “Petaluma River
Anthology” seems a simple one; take a group of children and young adolescents,
arm them with video cameras, identify a variety of Petalumans who can shed
light on some aspect of Petaluma history and have the students interview them.
Then select portions of those interviews to be included in the play and have
the interviewers play onstage the role of the people they interviewed.
What happens is a multi-layered theatrical experience. When a pair of teenagers take on the personas of 80
year olds they have interviewed, what comes across is not only the wisdom of
the older couple but the realization that the younger actors portraying them
have been exposed to that perspective and have internalized it for this
production. You know they must have been changed by the experience and that
this is a change they may not even be aware of for years to come. Sometimes,
eight decades of experience speaking through a young adolescent is humorous,
often it is moving. Several
times during the production, I was aware that many in the audience had tears in
their eyes.
The Spanish playwright, Lope de Vega, born three
hundred years before the founding of Petaluma, described the basic requirement
for theater to be just “two boards and a passion”. Even then, Lope’s
statement was an oversimplification but “Petaluma River Anthology” is an
example of why you do not need elaborate sets or costumes to have an
emotionally satisfying theatrical experience. The production is staged simply
but effectively with a few areas representing a living room, study, and
office. The bare apron of the stage is used imaginatively as a BMX
track, the Petaluma River, and as a stage for the performance of dance numbers
and for the singing of the chorus. Costumes are street clothes, as near to
the ones worn when the students interviewed their subjects. An additional layer
to the play was added when the director used projected images of the original
interviewee on a screen above the stage.
Music makes up a significant part of the
production. Traditional and new songs are blended throughout the production and
despite the insistent pounding chords of the aptly named Pulsators performing
outside on a nearby stage, the “Petaluma River Anthology” singers managed to
sing clearly, even beautifully without being distracted by the outside
music. Choreography was basic but appropriate - simple enough for the actors
to perform creditably but interesting enough to hold the audience attention.
“Petaluma River Anthology” though is an ensemble success and it would be unfair
to single out those who have made special contributions a list that includes
the Petalumans who provided the raw material for this production.
I am a native of New Hampshire and have
several times had the opportunity to see Thornton Wilder’s masterpiece, “Our
Town”, set in Peterborough, New Hampshire. Even though the themes of the play are
universal, I had the feeling that it was about my home. Now after seventeen
years in Petaluma, leaving Herzog Hall after the performance, I once again had
the feeling, “This play is about my home.”
In short, I think that if you love Petaluma,
you’ll appreciate knowing its history, where it has succeeded and where it has
disappointed. “Petaluma River Anthology” is an opportunity to do just that at a
performance that also offers a moving and memorable theatrical experience.
As the audience filed out of the theater, I
overheard several people say that they wanted to see “Petaluma River Anthology”
again during its run at the Cinnabar Theater. For them and anyone else who
would like to get tickets for what seems like an unfortunately limited performance
schedule, you can find ticketing details at:
http://www.cinnabartheater.org/cinnabar.2008-petaluma.river.anthology.html
Click here for original URL (note: some publications expire after a while)
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