Dramatic and visual extravagances make for a work of unprecedented originality
Everything dies or breaks down in this ‘apocalyptic revue’. Despite the gloomy subject matter, laughter is never far away.
A scale model of a spaceship spans out across the entire stage. The engine room is constructed from computer parts. A bunch of old mobile phones play the part of a mega-transmitter scouring space for habitable planets. There is a nursery full of rotting vegetables and a mortuary with rows of bodies in plastic bags. All are connected by long metal corridors.
Theatre maker and visual artist Herman Helle walks a small video camera through the scale model. While the images come to life on a large projection screen he reads out disconcerting extracts from his logbook.
The spaceship, it emerges, has been cruising aimlessly through space for hundreds of years. And now pig aids has broken out and the crew and rations have become infected: if they don’t find a planet with a favourable climate soon they will all suffocate.
Together with Pauline Kalker and Arlene Hoornweg, Helle is a core member of Hotel Modern theatre company from Rotterdam. The group specialises in this kind of onstage live animation. For previous pieces they constructed and presented onstage a community of shrimps and a concentration camp. Death and transience are recurrent themes throughout their oeuvre – as they are again in Seaplane Mothership.
The account of a spaceship faced with extinction is only one act of the play. This is no great pity because although the construction is both ingenious and a visual treat, the story that accompanies it is less well devised and concludes rather predictably. But there is a lot more to this ‘one-man show’ than only this scene. Helle also performs a comical flower-arranging act, for example. A little later he is a doctor giving a talk on ceramics. The doctor has a passion for dinner plates, and is particularly fascinated by their fragility. Helle also presents a bizarre slide show of snaps he took of himself with, in the background, car accidents, arrests taking place, and animals – both dead and living. His dry comments about them lend a twisted hilarity to this protracted series of fatal and non-fatal errors. So what is the message of this ‘apocalyptic revue’, as the group itself describes this production? Everything dies or breaks down. This simple departure point has inspired the group to such a diversity of dramatic and visual extravagance that the outcome is a work of unprecedented originality – one that raises a smile despite the gloomy subject matter.
Halfway through Seaplane Mothership a film is shown that typifies the group’s sense of absurdism. A gorgeously lit scale model of an old-fashioned library is occupied by gnomes with evil on their mind. They push over bookcases and set everything alight. They look on contentedly in their red hats as the entire construction goes up in an impressive blaze. Sometimes nothing can beat the beauty of total destruction.
01-04-2011