where is evil?
By Douglas Messerli
David Lang and Mark Dion (libretto),
David Lang (composer) Anatomy Theater
/ Los Angeles, Redcat (Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater) in Disney Music Center; the
performance Howard Fox and I saw was at the matinee on Sunday, June 19, 2016
Based on true occurrences in early 18th century, when criminals and paupers were publicly dissected after their deaths
to determine where the evil existed in their bodies, this manifestation
concerns a young woman, Sarah Osborne (Peabody Southwell), who, beaten and
sexually abused by her step-father, was locked out of her own home and was
forced to survive as a prostitute. After marrying her pimp, she was regularly
beaten by him as well. Lacing her husband’s gin with laudanum, she then
proceeded to smother him before hushing her two young children and suffocating
them in turn.
Beginning with the confession in the
theater’s art gallery, Sarah is promptly hung before the eyes of the gathered
opera audience who have been served up, as they might have in the 18th century, ale and sausages. The Master of Ceremonies, Joshua Crouch (Marc
Kudisch) then encourages the crowd (“Follow me quickly, gentlemen”) to enter
the theater proper to observe the anatomy itself.
Obviously, there is rank smell of the
mob in this theatrical presentation, and Crouch does his best to bring out the
bestial lusts of his declared male audience (surely the sight of a beautiful
nude woman upon an operating table whose dead body was being, quite literally,
raped—her innards being carried away—must have titillated audiences of the day,
and even today’s audience began with oddly-placed giggles before settling down
to a more serious consideration), and, accordingly, we are made to comprehend,
even in viewing this “representation” of the act, our inward lusts. Yet the
self-inflated anatomist, Peel, argues that it is a necessary act to prove that
all parts of the body must be attune with the others and the world around them
in order to allow us to be a good citizens of the world.
“Where is evil?” is the question the trio ask again and again. Yet they
can find no contagion in any of her parts. It is apparent that the evil they
are seeking lies not in the corpse, but in us, the human society which turned a
blind eye to all of her abuse. And, obviously, as Lang has hinted in his
comments, that fact makes this opera very contemporary, particularly within the
context of the mob of haters who embrace a candidate such as Donald Trump.
Lang has become an increasingly impressive American composer. My only
complaint is that I wish the run of this work had a bit a longer so that I
might have returned to hear it again. Maybe a reprise next year? The Long Beach
Opera did this quite successfully with Lang’s and Mac Wellman’s The Difficulty of Crossing a Field.
Los Angeles, June 20, 2016
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (June 2016).
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