Death Becomes Her

Naked Stage makes morbid abstraction a little lively.

Kim Ehly and Katherine Amadeo
Paul Tei
Kim Ehly and Katherine Amadeo

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4.48 Psychosis: Directed by Paul Tei. With Katherine Amadeo, Erin Joy Schmidt, and Kim Ehly. Through May 18. The Naked Stage at The Pelican Theatre, 11300 NE Second Ave., Miami Shores; 954-261-1785, www.nakedstage.org

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Depressed playwright Sarah Kane killed herself in 1999, and 4.48 Psychosis was her last work. It sounds like a last work, too: full of desperate and unhappy self-indulgence, a sense of options exhausted and possibilities closed. Think of the sound of Elvis Presley's booming, bloated voice on 1977's Moody Blue, or of Edgar Allan Poe's mechanical menace in The Bells. Psychosis is like this.

Which is not necessarily bad — just depressing. Kane was a restless artistic soul, and her psychological suffering resulted in restless, depression-based art. Her script is odd. Other than an occasional indication for "silence" or "long silence," it contains no stage direction, no story, and no characters. There are only words, a great glut of them, stretched across 42 pages in formations that sometimes resemble concrete poetry. That poetry is about pain and nothing else — self-absorbed explications of torment that seem as likely to inspire contempt as compassion. Here is a representative sampling: "I feel that the future is hopeless and things cannot improve." "This is not a world in which I wish to live." "My thought walks away with a killing smile/Leaving discordant anxiety/Which roars in my soul." "Love keeps me alive in a cage of tears."

What do you do with material like this? Apparently anything you want. Lacking characters or stage direction, Psychosis is an openhearted submission to any theater company choosing to tackle it. Having understood this, everyone involved in the Naked Stage production runs wild. There is nothing in their work that is not explosive. This is true of the actors — Katherine Amadeo's "The Patient," Erin Joy Schmidt's "The Doctor," and Kim Ehly's "The Lover" are fully fleshed and bottomlessly weird — but it is also true of the artists and technicians, who, in most productions, would go unrecognized. Sevim Abaza's lighting design is a marvel, a creation with an aesthetic all its own that demands contemplation and appreciation beyond anything Kane has done. When The Patient, Kane's onstage surrogate, stands at a sink and cuts her arm, her body is lit from the bottom up by deep blue light, as though there were a small, sad sun in the basin. As visual art, this is a moment worth looking at in a play that is full of moments like it.

Antonio Amadeo's set is as jarring as the lights. Its focal point is a bed, propped up at an angle that is useful to audience members seeking a better glimpse of the girl-on-girl action destined to take place there, but probably hell on the ladies' backs. Part of the stage becomes a big, industrial shower, the kind of place you might go to get deloused or Zykloned. This area later becomes a small, claustrophobic room in what looks like an asylum. Everywhere, upside-down furniture is suspended from the ceiling. For a moment, Kate Amadeo's hair is whipped violently back by a wind that must come from a fan hidden among the TV sets and hampers up there. There is no reason for this — nothing in the script demands it — but it seems right. Naked Stage has made Kane's circumscribed, hopelessly alienated mind immersive. It lets us in.

The net result is a production that explores death from the wrong end and actually seems to tell us something — even though the script often sounds like something posted on a MySpace blog by a 14-year-old emo chick. This is a remarkable flaw for a play that might be the most exciting thing to happen to South Florida theater this year. To reconcile the apparent paradox, it seems there are two questions that demand answers. The first is this: Was Sarah Kane full of shit?

She did kill herself, which goes a long way toward proving she really was as miserable as Psychosis makes her seem. And even if Kane's suicide was just the grand finale of a self-involved depression drama she secretly loved and encouraged, which I think is possible, you can only fake misery for so long. Eventually, it becomes real or you give up. So figure Psychosis is totally honest. This naturally leads one to ponder another big question: Are people this self-absorbedly depressed capable of producing decent art?

Probably not. If the point of art is to uncover some part of the world that your own experiences have not prepared you for and would never have otherwise revealed, then the inside of a deranged person's head is a pitifully tiny thing to bring to light. Small and unhelpful, it is the topography of a country that should never have been mapped, because it does not in fact exist. Contrary to what she has written in the play, Kane was depressed not because she understood life but because she didn't. Regardless of why, Kane was the opposite of insightful. Many, if not most, of the words in her script seem to describe the hysterical fringes of strong emotions rather than delving into the reasons behind them. "Love keeps me alive in a cage of tears" is a descriptive phrase, but it is a dispatch from someone in the throes of something; a phrase full of immediacy but devoid of content. Kane cannot tell us what love means to her or how it keeps her alive or why she's in a cage. She's too crazy to know.

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  • Keith Macpherson 08/27/2008 7:54:00 PM

    I can understand your frustration with Kane's text; it can often be bewilderingly cryptic. But if you're going to quote Kane's words, then disparagingly accuse them of lacking meaning, you should really take the trouble to quote them accurately. Love does not keep her "alive in a cage of tears"; the text actually says "a slave in a cage of tears". Whose meaning is a bit clearer. Perhaps your difficulty with this line lies not with the line itself but your own misreading of it?

  • hiya 05/04/2008 2:22:00 PM

    Density is something kevin no like

  • Phil Kingston 05/03/2008 3:06:00 PM

    Maybe you could have a look at some of Sarah Kane's other work before dismissing her so tritely. She was a remarkable writer with a deep understanding of theatrical tradition and a clear vision of the type of theatre she was making. One simple proof of her worth is the numerous productions that continue to be made of her plays. I can't beleive this is simply some mass hallucination of morbid band-wagon jumping but a reflection that her difficult, challenging and beautiful exploration of the extremes of the human condition has more depth than you were able to discern. To take just one crassness in your review - '4:48 Psychosis' is no more autoboigraphical than Miller's 'After The Fall', to beleive a writer can only write from within their experience tempts me to beleive you haven't much respect for them.

  • Albert Acevedo 05/02/2008 10:41:00 PM

    I am a drama teacher. Also a Director. Check out thealliancetheatrelab.com. What school U.M., South Miami, Mays?

  • Elyse Wanshel 05/02/2008 8:22:00 PM

    Albert Acevedo! I think you were one of my old drama teachers....

  • Albert Acevedo 05/02/2008 7:57:00 PM

    I think it is impressive that The Naked Stage would tackle this script at this stage in the company's development. Most young theatre companies would play it safe, but not this group. They are one of the few companies that is taking risks. I hope that other companies will take their lead and make better choices when putting their seasons together. Small theatre companies like the Naked Stage, should be the places audiences can go to be challenged and provoked. The other companies in Miami and Broward seem to have forgotten that.

  • Marcela Leal Olmedo 05/02/2008 4:46:00 AM

    Respect to Elvis Presley

  • Kevin 05/01/2008 11:57:00 PM

    Are you kidding? Thank you for acknowledging how self serving Sarah Kane's script is, but you totally softballed your review by implying that Paul Tei's production makes up for it. Yes, Paul Tei is good. No, a good production cannot save a terrible, terrible play like Psychosis. It's boring, pseudopoetic, and dreary, hitting the same dull note over and over. You don't learn anything from it and it's not fun. So how can it be "the most exciting thing in South Florida theater this year"? I think you just give extra credit to anybody who actually takes a chance in this stale, stale theatrical climate.

 
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