Feb. 8, 2018
'Conduct' represents a milestone production for the School of Creative and Performing Arts
An immersive, interactive theatre performance running this week at the 91°ľÍř˝űÇřâs Reeve Theatre on the innovative work and controversial life of avant-garde composer Henry Cowell marks a milestone achievement for the School of Creative and Performing Arts (SCPA).
As a collaboration featuring the three SCPA divisions of dance, drama and music, with over 60 students and 10 faculty members taking part, the production is the schoolâs fullest realization yet of the interdisciplinary vision that was set out when the SCPA was formed in 2013.
âThereâs no question that this is the biggest production that the school has ever done,â says SPCA director Bruce Barton, who directed and conceived Conduct, inspired by the extensive research of music professor Jeremy Brown, who also plays saxophone in the production. âItâs a thoroughly interdisciplinary collaboration, with dance, drama and music working together on this huge project. Itâs a major accomplishment for the school, one that I think we can be quite proud of.â
An immersive and interactive production, Conduct will have the audience move through multiple spaces, says Barton, âwith the performance taking place all around them, itâs a pretty powerful sensory experience.â
The performance will include blindfolds (briefly), walking and standing in small spaces with irregular floor services, and a special âperformance soundscapeâ that audience members will be asked to download as an app to their phones. The soundscape was created by associate professor of music Laurie Radford and doctoral student Melike Ceylan.
âConduct offers a huge spectrum of experience,â says Barton, âranging from the small, subtle, and intimate to full-out spectacle.â
Despite the interactive, immersive nature of the performance, where in many ways the audience becomes a part of the story, Barton stresses that patrons need not feel anxious or intimidated. âOurs is a gentle invitation, deep into a dream world based on the life and work of Henry Cowell,â he says.
Regarded as one of the most influential avant-garde composers of the 20th century, Cowell is perhaps best known for his musical experimentation. His ground-breaking work included such techniques as âtone clusters,â wherein the piano is played with open hand and forearms. He also pioneered a method called âstring piano,â which involves playing the piano from inside its body, by plucking and sweeping the strings. (Barton notes that Juno Award winning composer and music professor Allan Bell will be one of several faculty members performing in Conduct, and he will be utilizing that very technique).
Music professor Allan Bell plays a piano from inside its body in a scene from Conduct.
Wojciech Mochniej
Further, Cowell was an early innovator of electronic instruments, working with Leon Theremin (inventor of the theremin) to create an instrument called the Rhythmicon, which could produce up to 17 different rhythmic patterns simultaneously.
âCowell spoke of the pursuit of the âsound that doesnât exist,ââ says Barton. âHe was a proponent of electronic instruments because he felt people couldnât play what he could hear in his head. There wasnât sufficient complexity in human performance to capture what he was after.â
Conduct also examines the great controversy of Cowellâs life when he was incarcerated in San Quentin Prison for alleged sexual contact with underage boys.
âNot surprisingly, Cowellâs arrest and time in prison were central, defining aspects of his life and career,â says Barton. âSo we donât shy away from these or other controversial topics in his personal history. But Conduct also doesnât follow a conventional narrative structure, so many of these aspects are approached more abstractly, through a direct immersion into our imagined history. Weâre seeking point of resonance and connection with our own historical moment, socially and culturally, and trying to avoid any sort of didactic position in relation to Cowell and his world.â
While a fully interdisciplinary initiative, Conduct is a division of drama production. Its ambitious set and costume designs are the work of MFA drama student Bianca Manual, one of several drama student designers on the project. Multiple drama faculty members have provided vital dramaturgical support and dramaâs technical production team has worked tirelessly to realize °ä´Ç˛ÔťĺłÜłŚłŮâs&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;complex vision.
âThe immersive nature of Conduct has taken the student actors into new performance territory and they have approached the challenge with enthusiasm and commitment,â says Barton.
Similarly, the SCPA chair of dance, Melissa Monteros, has worked with students from across the dance program to integrate original choreography with the musical and dramatic elements.