REVIEW: Praxis Stage’s ‘The Arsonists’ create a spark

Who really is the stranger at your door?

Directed ominously by Bob Scanlan, suspicion takes a front seat as Praxis Stage presents Max Frisch’s British absurdist satire, The Arsonists at Chelsea Theatre Works in Chelsea, Massachusetts through Sunday, September 15.  This semi-interactive production is approximately two hours with one intermission. Click here for more information and for tickets.

‘The naked truth told enough, nobody believes it’ is a variation of Nazi Joseph Goebbels’s Big Lie propaganda technique, ‘Repeat a lie often enough, it becomes the truth.’  The Arsonists build on that here as being blind to the obvious. 

First published by Max Frisch in 1953, The Arsonists has since evolved from a radio play to television and a stage production under other names such as The Fire Raisers or The Firebugs.  It delves into many issues including hypocrisy, fascism and propaganda.

Michael Anderson as Pre-show MC and other roles in Praxis Stage’s ‘The Arsonists’ Photo by Praxis Stage

In an unnamed town, place, and setting, The Arsonists is unorthodox right from the start and focuses on Kim H. Carrell as Gottlieb Biedermann who is contrary in many ways.  Relishing in his upper middle class affluence in an expensive ascot in lieu of a tie while smoking cigars, Biedermann just finishes reading about arsonists setting fires in people’s homes in his neighborhood when a towering stranger with bleached blond locks arrives at his door.  Anxious, preoccupied and frustrated Biedermann reluctantly lets him in.

Daniel Boudreau and Kim Carrell in Praxis Stage’s ‘The Arsonists’ Photo by Praxis Stage

 The stranger is Daniel Boudreau as charismatically chatty and homeless former circus wrestler Joe Schmitz.  Boudreau and Carrell share a gnawing awkwardness as Boudreau’s Schmitz voraciously eats and insists he is looking for a little humanity.  Boudreau delivers another impressive performance as Schmitz not entirely unlike his persuasive character Goldberg in The Birthday Party and he shares a darkly fascinating rapport with Zair Silva as mysterious thrill seeker Will Eisenring. 

Zair Silva and Daniel Boudreau in Praxis Stage’s ‘The Arsonists’ Photo by Praxis Stage

The Arsonists reveal some of life’s minor truisms such as when people dismiss behavior over the weather to mask negative emotion and more serious ones such as overlooking any event if it was not reported in the news.  Carrell as Biedermann is fixated on appearances and insists that we are all human beings regardless of status yet disassociates himself with people and is extremely ruthless in other areas of his life.  Along with Julia Trueblood as Biedermann’s equally anxious wife Babette, they wish to appear accommodating even if that is not necessarily the case.

Annunciating Mr. Biedermann’s name for emphasis, Stephanie Charlton is humorous as practical and edgy maid Anna, reflecting much of the exasperation the audience feels at Beidermann’s increasingly bizarre behavior exemplified by an amusing moment amongst an otherwise somber scene between Biedermann and Anna arguing over table settings. 

Julia Trueblood and Stephanie Charlton in Praxis Stage’s ‘The Arsonists’ Photo by Praxis Stage

There is musical accompaniment to The Arsonists by vocalist Miss Mary Mac, Music Director David Krimsky and Malachi Connolly on guitar with percussionist Benedict Dawn-Cross highlighted by a grim cover of R.E.M’s It’s the End of the World as We Know it as part of this cabaret-style show.  Mackenzie Adamick’s sound design is often immersive and lends to some of the show’s tension as a timer sporadically ticks in the background. The most impressive part of Kevin Fulton’s lighting is inside a hidden door that is realistic, convincing and won’t be revealed here. 

Miss Mary Mac on vocals and the band Photo by Praxis Stage

Like Praxis Stage’s previous absurdist work for The Birthday Party, The Arsonists may render you speechless, a bit disoriented and frustrated, yet you may also find yourself invested in this production’s motivations and outcome especially in shifty Boudreau as Schmitz and Zair Silva as Eisenring.  Both absurdist works examine the human condition and deliver its share of truisms from an absurdist perspective but unfortunately, The Arsonists leaves little to interpretation as both productions culminate in a dining room table showdown in which the tables turn.

The Greek chorus of firemen, composed of five actors including Alison Butts, Abby Duell, Jean Dany Joachim, Gabriel Pagan and Jessica Newman, appear to pose as a neighborhood watch.  The idea is intriguing, but their welcome wears thin at first chorusing at times what the audience might be thinking before coming off as condescending, repetitive, and unnecessary with the exception of a brief haunting song sung by Jean Dany Joachim right after intermission.

Chorus: Left to Right Abby Duell Jean Dany Joachim Gabriel Pagan Alison Butts and Jessica Newman in Praxis Stage’s ‘The Arsonists’ Photo by Praxis Stage

At one point, the show encourages you to think for yourself and yet, the show is not without its subtle biases and political leanings.  It may have been more thought provoking if left ambiguous as the play is already witty and relevant on its own.

Directed ominously by Bob Scanlan, Praxis Stage presents Max Frisch’s The Arsonists continuing at Chelsea Theatre Works in Chelsea, Massachusetts through Sunday, September 15.  This semi-interactive production is approximately two hours with one intermission. Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Packing and unpacking Praxis Stage’s impactful ‘The Birthday Party’

‘What came first, the chicken or the egg?!!’

This line of interrogation provides an element of a number of surprises delivered by a pair of possible gangsters in Noble prize-winner Harold Pinter’s The Birthday Party.  Harold Pinter’s thought-provoking work and style inspired many famous playwrights as well as greats in film and television.  For example, it is rumored that Quentin Tarantino, inspired by Harold Pinter, patterned gangsters Samuel L. Jackson’s Jules Winnfield and John Travolta’s Vincent Vega in Pulp Fiction and their absurdist style of dialogue to Goldberg and McCann in The Birthday Party.  The art of the chicken and the egg conversation to a dialogue about a Royal with Cheese gets curiouser and curiouser.

Keenly directed by James Wilkinson, Praxis Stage presented Harold Pinter’s comedy of menace The Birthday Party live and in person at Chelsea Theatre Works in Chelsea, Massachusetts through Sunday, April 28.  Click here for more information.

Zair Silva, Daniel Boudreau, Kevin Paquette, Darya Denisova, Paul Valley, and Sharon Mason in Praxis Stage’s ‘The Birthday Party’ Photos by Alex Aroyan

Taking place exclusively in a seaside boarding house, The Birthday Party focuses on unassuming Petey, depicted with an air of laidback serenity by Paul Valley, his anxious and chatty wife Meg, portrayed with tightly wound cheerfulness by Sharon Mason as well as boarder and unemployed pianist Stanley in an impressively mercurial performance by Zair Silva.  With Petey and Stanley’s mixed participation, Meg navigates her daily routines at the boarding house with a plastered smile and a meticulous, yet monotonous zeal.  However, a monkey wrench is thrown into the equation when two mysterious guests named Goldberg and McCann suddenly rent a room and everyone anticipates their imminent arrival while Stanley instantly feels a sense of doom. 

Make no mistake, The Birthday Party is indeed about a birthday party which is a joyous occasion celebrating a milestone, but what if it is also merely an annual ritual done on any given day in which one is expected to celebrate? 

The cast of ‘The Birthday Party’ Photo credit Nile Scott Studios

The Birthday Party may render you speechless, a bit disoriented and frustrated, yet you will find yourself invested in this peculiar production’s motivations and outcomes.  This dark comedy examines human nature from a Noble prize-winning playwright’s absurdist perspective leaving much to interpretation.   Pinter shakes up each character’s expectations and was known to loath explaining his craft and or his characters’ real motivations.

This gripping cast is more than up to the challenges this complicated show offers with quick witted timing as moods and situations change on a dime often with breakneck speed.  Mason’s Meg instinctive caretaking habits build a warm rapport with Petey while she shares a bizarre maternal affinity toward Stanley with the exception of a scene using the unnerving word, ‘succulent.’  Beautiful Darya Denisova as adventurous and flirtatious Lulu has ideas of her own.

Kevin Paquette in Praxis Stage’s ‘The Birthday Party’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Daniel Boudreau as Goldberg and Kevin Paquette as McCann make an intriguing, focused and stealthy pair.  An avid and smooth storyteller, Boudreau is a natural as Goldberg, swaggering with unmitigated charm and authority while brawny McCann is a sly sidekick.  Whether they are deliberate and threatening or schmoosing with feigned gallantry, each of Goldberg and McCann’s movements keeps the audience guessing.  Some of the most intense and challenging sequences occur between Silva, Boudreau and Paquette demonstrating a rollercoaster of emotions that will leave you at the edge of your seat with questions left unanswered.

The Birthday Party is shrewd, shocking, and suspenseful, even over what seems like the ridiculous.  More often than not, Pinter’s work is not what it seems and reality is often blurred. However, order, chaos, and delusion all play massive roles in this cast of ambiguous characters.  Where there is warmth, there is order.  Where there is panic, there is chaos and where there is delusion, compassion creeps in. 

Keenly directed by James Wilkinson, Praxis Stage presented The Birthday Party, a comedy of menace, live and in person at Chelsea Theatre Works in Chelsea, Massachusetts through Sunday, April 28.  Click here for more information.