Miles Rose (Presley) and Amelia Chavez (Haley) are pictured
last February rehearsing a scene for "The Pitchfork Disney."
MONMOUTH, Ill. – The Monmouth College Department of Theatre has the
perfect production to celebrate the Halloween season – an encore
production of Philip Ridley’s dystopian and unsettling
The
Pitchfork Disney.
The “in your face” British play will be staged Oct. 30-31 in the
College’s Wells Theater.
“
The Pitchfork Disney was
considered by many critics one of the most important plays of the 1990s,
and it’s really the seminal play of the style of British, in-your-face
theatre,” said the play’s director, Monmouth theatre professor
Doug
Rankin. “It’s extremely close-up, and the audience should feel
pretty intimidated. It feels a little bit dangerous.”
Rankin directed
The Pitchfork
Disney when the Department of Theatre presented it for the first
time last February. The four-member cast is also the same:
Amelia
Chavez ’21 of Chicago and
Miles
Rose ’19 of Princeton, Ill., play siblings Presley and Haley,
along with
Declan Crego ’21 of
New Glarus, Wis., and
Richard
Eyre ’20 of Mount Prospect, Ill.
The play is about two teenagers who have lived without their parents for
about a decade. The teenagers have found a way to make it on their own
without any contact with society, and by eating a lot of chocolate. Then
two outsiders come into their home, turning the teens’ world upside
down. Because of the play’s mature subject matter and language, audience
members should be at least 16 years of age.
“It’s got a little bit of creepiness, it’s dark, it’s mysterious and we
really don’t know what it means exactly, but the audience will all
probably get a little something different out of it because it is sort
of enigmatic in terms of the plot,” Rankin said. “It’s kind of what your
mind makes of it.”
The encore production of
The
Pitchfork Disney will be entered in the upcoming regional Kennedy
Center American College Theatre Festival.
“It’s a small cast, which is critical, in that we knew we were picking
it to compete at the regional Kennedy Center festival, and it would have
to tour,” said Rankin. “By having only four cast members and a fairly
small set with small lighting demands, it worked really well.”
Although
The Pitchfork Disney hasn’t
changed from its first staging at Monmouth, Rankin said the actors have,
and that’s a good thing.
“The thing I’ve enjoyed the most is seeing our actors grow,” said
Rankin. “I’ve seen those same actors rehearsing for (the Oct. 25-28
staging of A
Midsummer Night’s
Dream), and they really blow me away by their abilities.”
In addition to the actors’ growth, another twist with the encore
production is that the play will be presented at the on-campus Wells
Theater instead of the downtown Fusion Theatre, where it was staged in
February.
“It’s a fun staging,” said Rankin. “We’re putting the audience up on the
stage, not out in the house, so it will be a different feel than a lot
of the shows we do at the Wells. It’s also Halloween and the night
before. On the night before, we’re going to be following the performance
with the (free) film
Sweeney Todd,
which is somewhat appropriate for the Halloween season.”
# # #
Monmouth College will present
“The Pitchfork Disney” at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 30-31 at the College’s Wells
Theater. Tickets can be purchased online at department.monm.edu/theatre.
Tickets are $8 for adults, $7 for seniors and students, and $6 for
students and faculty with a Monmouth College ID.