One of my questions going in was whether the event would feel more like a play or more like a game. (To me, it felt like a play.) And was the performer even really performing if they hadn’t seen the script? Would she be more of an M.C. directing the event? Or the subject of the play, relying on cues to improvise her performance? (She was all of these to some extent – Blank deliberately juggles the participants’ roles – but I can say that the version of Blank I saw focused less on Hitchcock as a character than I expected and relied heavily on her skills as a performer.)
I felt intellectually engaged by Blank. It made me think about the nature of the interaction between writers, performers, and the audience, not just in this play, but in any context in which actors convey a writer’s story to an audience – the creative input each brings to the table.
Also, I thought about the community that forms each time people come together in that context – one defined by the event we are all engaged in creating together, and one that is unique. The act of creating a play is building that community that will never come together again in the same way to create the same event, so each performance is special. (This idea is clearly important to Soleimanpour. On a related note, at one point the play will ask you to take photos. Without giving spoilers, I encourage you to do so – I did not, and I wish I had.)
Finally, the play I saw asked me to consider how we script our own lives – who we are as characters, how we “write” ourselves and the people in our lives, and the way in which our interpretations of our life events create their own version of a play in which we are all both the audiences and the performers.
That’s a lot of thinking for a play we helped create on the spot!
Those are the thoughts with which Blank left me. I have no idea what thoughts your version of the play will leave you. If you want to find out, Blank is playing at various locations around the Triangle through Saturday, May 25. For a list of performers, locations and times, click here.