skygiants: Kraehe from Princess Tutu embracing Mytho with one hand and holding her other out to a flock of ravens (uses of enchantment)
[personal profile] skygiants
[personal profile] genarti and I went with a friend to see Plexus Polaire's Moby Dick on tour today, ft. "seven actors, fifty puppets, video-projections, a drowned orchestra and a whale-sized whale," (to quote the press copy) and now I have been sitting here for several hours trying to figure out how to express how incredibly effective this was as an adaptation.

Not just the orchestra but the whole set is drowned, is the first thing. The whole design of the stage, visual and sound, is constructed in such a way as to give you the sense that you and the cast are underwater the entire time; "everyone in the boat was drowned from the start," I said, as we walked back, and [personal profile] genarti said, "you think your boat is the whole world that matters and it's just one tiny mote in the world you're actually in."

The second thing is that of course everyone is puppets -- everyone except Ishmael, who is introduced as a human actor delivering a condensed (and less manic) (and even more depressed) (but still quite funny) (though we were the only ones laughing and the guy next to us gave us a very severe look) (does he not understand that it's supposed to be funny?!) version of his opening monologue. But there is an Ishmael puppet, who appears after Ishmael and the other sailors take the oath with Ahab, and the Ishmael puppet is on the ship moving among the other puppets, dynamic, part of the narrative, while the human Ishmael stands quite still as an outsider -- our friend made this point about the movement, which I hadn't caught because I was too busy marveling at the fact that they literally did "Muppet Moby Dick and Ishmael is the only human" and it was haunting and immersive and thematically compelling?! Because the puppetry is of course part of the point. When puppet!Ahab is getting strapped into his lines, and the puppeteers seem caring or sycophantic, and then suddenly it's a trap and a threat and puppet Ahab looks at them and sees them and is clearly raging about it -- that is, in fact, what Moby Dick is about.

But of course Moby Dick is also about whales and whaling and the whaling industry and the show does not forget it nor does it let the audience forget it. The first whaling sequence features two relatively whale puppets, a mother and calf. These are not the whale-sized whales promised in the cover copy; those will show up later. These little hand-sized whale puppets on stage for about three minutes and those three minutes are perhaps the most brutal and devastating in the show.

(ME, LATER: and also when all the little puppets from the Pequod are drowning in the vastness of the ocean, that is also so effective! you really see the horror of it!
[personal profile] genarti: I mean, sure, I guess ... but I have to admit I was mostly rooting for Moby Dick because a big part of me was still thinking about that mother and calf whale puppet ...
ME: well, sure, you can root for Moby Dick and still feel sad for the crew of the Pequod all drowning alone in the vastness of the ocean!
[personal profile] genarti: I guess)

It's a quick ninety-minute show, so it is sort of a highlights reel, but a highlights reel that is deeply targeted for maximum impact. There's no Queequeg-Ishmael marriage at the beginning, and for a moment I seriously wondered if everything was going to be condensed down to Ishmael and Ahab, but instead you get a series of mostly silent romantic scenes between puppet!Ishmael and puppet!Queequeg about which Ishmael-the-human-actor speaks very little -- when he did finally say, "He was my [significant pause] brother," there was a ripple of laughter around the theater, and I wondered if that was because everyone had picked up on the context, or if that was just the Moby Dick fans who were aware that Queequeg and Ishmael were in fact already married. Pip is also there, in a preview of what it means to be drowning in the vastness of the ocean, and Starbuck, a little, though I missed a lot of the Starbuck-Ahab dialogue. I also missed the Rachel which does not get a look-in. Fedallah is there but only as Ahab's puppeteers, a collection of black-clad and black-turbaned figures in skull makeup who are never introduced as part of the world of the Pequod. In general this show chooses to engage with the problems with race in the text by simply not engaging, and Fedallah is the most pointed example of that. I'm not entirely sure this is a success, but then, I'm not sure Dave Molloy's method of staring Moby Dick's Race Problems directly in the face works either.

Before I saw the show, I was thinking to myself, 'I'm very glad I've read Moby Dick but also it would have been very funny to base my entire sense of Moby Dick off the Dave Malloy show and the Plexus Polaire puppet show.' But now I can't think this because I have no idea if this show would have hit at all if I hadn't gone in already knowing some of the themes -- the way it's working with the text is brilliant if you know what you're looking at and I truly don't know if it makes any sense if you don't -- and I would have been so deeply sorry to miss the experience of it hitting right, which the vast majority off it really and truly did! Love to be emotionally compromised by whale puppetry!

Anyway. Unfortunately I cannot tell everyone to go see it because I don't know where or when it will be next; we all desperately wished afterwards that there was a recorded copy we could start foisting on people but instead I will just drop the trailer which at least conveys the sense of underwater haunting.

Date: 2023-01-15 05:07 am (UTC)
genarti: Ocean water with text "no borders, no boundaries." ([misc] no boundaries)
From: [personal profile] genarti
IT WAS SO SO SO GOOD AND I'M GOING TO BE HAUNTED FOREVER BY THOSE THREE MINUTES

Date: 2023-01-15 05:09 am (UTC)
genarti: Rose garden from Revolutionary Girl Utena movie, with text "gone to feed the roses." ([sku] o fertilizer (by the wind grieved))
From: [personal profile] genarti
Also I would like to shout out the three musicians doing truly INCREDIBLE work at the eerie atmospheric haunting on double bass, electric bass, and... drum kit? wide array of sound effects using bells and a drum kit and stuff?? plus incredible mostly wordless singing in tight harmony. Watching them sing at each other was just a joy even while the singing was sending chills down my spine.

Date: 2023-01-15 05:49 am (UTC)
brownbetty: (Default)
From: [personal profile] brownbetty

Incredible. Is this troupe out of Quebec, or France, do you know?

Date: 2023-01-15 05:58 am (UTC)
genarti: Knees-down view of woman on tiptoe next to bookshelves (Default)
From: [personal profile] genarti
They're Norwegian-French, apparently!

Date: 2023-01-15 06:40 am (UTC)
sovay: (Otachi: Pacific Rim)
From: [personal profile] sovay
the trailer which at least conveys the sense of underwater haunting.

Okay; I like that.

Date: 2023-01-15 10:44 am (UTC)
littlerhymes: (Default)
From: [personal profile] littlerhymes
Never in my whole life would "puppet Moby Dick" be a thought that crossed my mind but this sounds absolutely incredible. I want to see it!

Date: 2023-01-16 05:50 am (UTC)
genarti: Sepia-toned bridge & trees & figure sitting on bridge looking down, with text "we're gone but we don't know where." ([misc] and we don't know where)
From: [personal profile] genarti
As soon as we heard about it, both Becca and I were like, "either this is going to be amazing or it's going to be a hot mess but either way we have GOT TO SEE THIS," and I'm unutterably delighted that it was amazing.

Date: 2023-01-15 12:32 pm (UTC)
copperfyre: (Default)
From: [personal profile] copperfyre
This sounds amazing, and I desperately want to see it now. Emotionally harrowing Muppet Moby Dick is truly everything I could want from life!

Date: 2023-01-15 01:16 pm (UTC)
troisoiseaux: (Default)
From: [personal profile] troisoiseaux
Ooooooh, this looks so cool.

Date: 2023-01-15 02:10 pm (UTC)
osprey_archer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] osprey_archer
Cannot BELIEVE that Moby-Dick never occurred to me as a potential Muppet adaptation! It would be perfect for the Muppets! Except for the part where they all die at the end, except human!Ishmael (obviously Ishmael is the one human), that would be a real bummer for a Muppet movie.

I'm seeing Miss Piggy as Ahab, although that might tend to make Kermit the white whale... but I could also see him as Starbuck, the second mate that obsessed Ahab runs roughshod over.

AHEM ANYWAY this adaptation sounds amazing! The undersea aesthetic sounds immersive and amazing.

Date: 2023-01-20 03:33 am (UTC)
osprey_archer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] osprey_archer
Whale played by actual whale, and the whalers and whale become friends at the end! Or something. Hmmm. Is this getting too far from original Moby-Dick though...

Date: 2023-01-15 02:12 pm (UTC)
pauraque: bird flying (Default)
From: [personal profile] pauraque
Everyone in the boat was drowned from the start is a stunning sentence! And looks to have been apropos, from your description of the play.

Date: 2023-01-15 09:41 pm (UTC)
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
From: [personal profile] rachelmanija
That looks AMAZING. I would go see it even though this is my knowledge of Moby Dick>

- Call me Ishmael.

- Ishmael and Queequeeg, who has tattoos and collects heads (?) share a bunk and are totally married.

- Ahab had his leg bitten off by the white whale Moby Dick, and sails the seas on the Pequod looking for it. Themes of obsession and the futility of revenge? Man vs nature?

- There is a chapter about men squeezing sperm that is exactly as homoerotic as one might imagine. Debate over whether this was intentional???

- Ahab is dragged overboard by Moby Dick, the Pequod sinks, and only Ishmael, rescued by the good ship Rachel, is left to tell the tale.

- Many, many chapter on whaling fill in the rest of the book.

Date: 2023-01-15 11:44 pm (UTC)
aamcnamara: (Default)
From: [personal profile] aamcnamara
You saw it! You saw the Norwegian puppet Moby Dick!! I'm so glad.

... investigation turns up that they're going to Chicago for the International Puppet Theater Festival (!) next weekend, I don't think I can go to Chicago at the last minute but I am making a note of the puppet festival for future reference.

Date: 2023-01-16 05:06 am (UTC)
chestnut_pod: A close-up photograph of my auburn hair in a French braid (Default)
From: [personal profile] chestnut_pod
There is so much cool art out there! Wow, I never would have imagined this, but I am so glad you saw it and told us all about it.

Date: 2023-01-16 07:58 pm (UTC)
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
From: [personal profile] sophia_sol
lkdsjflakfhsldfj I am so delighted that this existed for you and beth to go see because WOW what a thing! I am delighted to know that there is an emotionally affecting moby-dick puppet show in this world and only wish it were in my geographical vicinity to go see too.

Date: 2023-05-27 10:17 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] plinythemammaler
I never thought I would get a chance to see this and I just did, I appreciate your notes on the show so much!!! Agreed that the mother and baby whales were so emotionally compromising and also omg I did not expect them to show peeling the blubber blanket like an orange on stage, amazing! The puppeteers dancing with Ahab and throwing him around in his lines and the ambiguity about whether everyone is a puppet because this is the little memory theatre Ishmael has constructed in his head or because they are all fated (or caught in whale lines!) is so good. I loved that they added mermaids, I didn't realise we needed deathly cosmic horror mermaids in moby dick. I too missed the Starbuck Ahab dialogue and also thought it was an inexplicable decision to have Starbuck be the one to leave pip off the boat when he gets so little else for characterisation but also its impossible to get the whole book in.....I loved the sense of immensity and drownedness throughout SO much.

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