How far will anyone go for ratings?
It’s a mad world and UBS is here for it.
With compelling direction by Ashley Kelly Tata, adapted for the stage by Lee Hall and based on Paddy Chayefsky’s Academy Award-winning screenplay, The Umbrella Stage Company presents dark satirical drama Network live and in person at Umbrella Arts Center in Concord, Massachusetts through Sunday, November 3. This well-timed production is 90 minutes with no intermission and contains explicit language and adult themes. Click here for more information and for tickets.
Set in September of 1975, UBS is a struggling television station drowning in the ratings. Tensions are sky high as executives scramble to save it. As a result, world weary veteran newsman and widower Howard Beale, a metamorphic portrayal by Bill Mootos, has been forced to retire after 25 years dedicating his whole life to his work. In an act of desperation, Beale makes a shocking decision that impacts everyone around him.
Steeped in nostalgic glory, Network seamlessly rewinds the clock to a time where television was the world’s primary source for news, information, and entertainment. From three piece suits to wrap dresses to Barrymore collars, costume designer Nancy Leary captures the essence of the 70s while Afsoon Pajoufar’s duel level retro studio set features vintage studio equipment, a line of wall clocks keeping track of various time zones all over the world and a multitasking wooden desk.
The towering UBS logo printed across SeifAllah Salotto-Cristobal’s projection screen can be distracting at times, but symbolically portrays the media’s monstrous influence on the world over anything else. Not only does it provide a window into nostalgic television but an intimate account into the characters’ reactions as if the camera is always rolling. Featuring flashes of famous 70s commercials to searing headlines to classic TV shows like Laverne and Shirley, Salotto-Cristobal’s montages are overwhelming, rapid and impactful. Even the television test signal can be unsettling. Aubrey Dube’s audio design bring to life some particularly intense moments as well as satirical humor demonstrated in David Bowie’s meticulously placed Fame during a pivotal scene in the production.
Having worked through the Golden Age of Television, Howard Beale has seen the trends change into a darker tomorrow. Mootos craftily transforms as alcoholic newsman turned influencer Howard Beale. From a professional newsman straightening his tie, Mootos captures the derailment methodically from weary to anguish and everything in between struggling to learn what is really important.
Workaholic Diane, ferociously portrayed by Blythe de Oliveira Foster, is a laser focused executive voracious for success and ratings that she flagrantly talks of immorality like she is ordering a drink at a bar. Justifying unimaginable things hungry to accomplish her goals, Foster as Diane brings gall, gumption and a dark humor to her greediness that make her fascinating in her audacity. Foster delivers some thought provoking scenes with Barlow Adamson who is impressive as tough yet rational Max and one of the few sympathetic voices of reason in this production. Will McGarrahan also makes a lasting impression as menacing Arthur Jensen.
Network is a cleverly executed and gripping production that becomes so immersive that it may encourage you to contemplate whether anything has changed today or worsened especially in this digital age. Network’s lighting is almost glaringly bright during show time and shadows take over behind the scenes depicting a darker reality. Tata’s direction is invasive and revealingly up close and personal to expose the nature of many of the production’s themes including corporate greed, corruption, sensationalism, consumerism, scandal, violence and fame. It is a barrage of ideas that are peeled away bit by bit and what is unveiled is both fascinating, alarming and not so unfamiliar before it reaches its shocking conclusion. When has it all gone too far?
The Umbrella Stage Company presents dark satirical drama Network live and in person at Umbrella Arts Center in Concord, Massachusetts through Sunday, November 3. This well-timed production is 90 minutes with no intermission and contains explicit language and adult themes. Click here for more information and for tickets.
