problems of the text
by Douglas Messerli
Elevator Repair Service Arguendo / Los Angeles, Redcat (the Roy
and Edna Disney/Cal Arts Theater) in the Walt Disney Concert Hall / the
performance I saw as on opening night, November 6, 2014
In the work I saw last night at Redcat, Arguendo, uses court documents from the
case of Barnes v. Glen Theatre, a
1991 Supreme Court hearing about nude dancing in the state of Indiana. Applying
the actual words, as well as hems, haws, hacks, and sometimes incoherent
interruptions of the Supreme Court justices of that term—William H. Rehnquist,
Byron R. White, Thurgood Marshall, Harry A. Blackmun, John Paul Stevens, Sandra
Day O’Connor, Antonin Scalia, Anthony M. Kennedy, and David H. Souter, plus the
legal arguments of Mr. Uhl (for the Petitioner) and Mr. Ennis (for the
Respondent)—the company has great fun imagining the internal thinking of the
various speakers as they throw out various contradicting and sometimes
shockingly unpredictable comments (particularly given what we know of the
general viewpoints of individuals such as Scalia, Kennedy, Rehnquist and others
today) for “arguendos” sake, “for the sake of argument.”
Much of this makes for quite spritely fun, as the justices, all played
by three office-chair-bound actors, who, like their arguments, shift and roll
across space at the same time that director John Collins and video designer Ben
Rubin roll vast pages of previous decisions across the back wall and floor like
so much literary confetti. The often nonplussed lawyers attempt to present
their cases against the backdrop of the court justices, often quite
hilariously, querying and challenging former lower-court decisions while
simultaneously attempting to determine, in minute detail, just what constitutes
a message in a nude dance and how such “messages” differ from similar
expressions in higher art forms such as opera or theatrical productions.
Scalia, in particular, seems nearly obsessed with the nudity in Richard
Strauss’ Salome.
At the very crux of several of the arguments is a seeming
inability of previous courts to be able to comprehend that expression through
dance (what all describe as “performance dance,” as if all dance might not be
performative) may be as significant as expression through language or through
musical performance. Somehow dance has not been given the same leniency in
relationship with First Amendment rights, we perceive, as other forms of art,
and therefore “nude” dancing is not seen as a statement of significance in the
same way that Henry Miller might speak about nudity or a rock band might
comment on such behavior in their songs and lyrics.
All of this wild deconstruction of court documents, in the hands of the
Elevator Repair Service, provides for a kind of heady amusement—at least for a
while. But over the short duration of this performance, it suddenly dawns on us
that, despite the absurd nit-picking differentiations between the desire for
expression and the message we perceive is that a far more serious issue about
the very difference between actor and responder, between community notions of morality
and personal expression and the significance of those values, without the
possibility that this theatrical group might be able to pause for a moment to
explore them. At the heart of these questions also lie profound issues
concerning what is natural, or even concerning what nature is itself. Finally,
we can only ask, why does nudity—and thousands of other things relating to our
bodies—so frighten us? Why are so many the audience even giggling even as I
mentally noted this, at Mike Iveson’s rather unattractive—certainly not
sexually alluring—nude body?
What the justices are doing in their arguendo
may be quite ridiculous on the surface, but if one truly contemplates the
substance of those law-based arguments, we realize that the whole matter exists
in a kind self-created maze of impenetrable realities in which the law, because
of its limited language, is simply unable to engage. In short, the language the
justices are using cannot properly focus on the very issues wherein such
seemingly trivial things truly do matter. And, in satirizing of what has already
been utterly trivialized, the actors and the plays creators gradually reveal
themselves as being as highly unoriginal as the justices had been locked away
in their thousands of pages of case law.
In short, in watching this otherwise humorous bagatelle, I gradually
came to perceive the real problem was what might be described as a kind of
elevation of unoriginality. Given the
nature of the preconceived text one can only work to reveal what one sees as
its already pre-existent truths—the role often taken on by conservative
pedants, who represent such texts as sacred fact—or by more liberal
commentators such as this theater company to challenge and mock such texts,
exposing their flaws of logic through humor.
Los Angeles, November 7, 2014
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (November 2014).
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