
"Eric Overmyer [is] one of
this nation's most accomplished and vividly imaginative
playwrights."
Wayne Johnson, The Seattle
Times
"In NATIVE SPEECH, ON THE VERGE and IN PERPETUITY THROUGHOUT THE
UNIVERSE, Eric Overmyer manifested a extraordinary command over
the tools of language: sound, syntax and image.... In DARK
RAPTURE, which premiered at Seattle's Empty Space Theater in May,
Overmyer's verbal dexterity is acute as ever, but this time it's
harnessed to a plot delivered by characters who seem driven by
purposes of their own. It's by far Overmyer's most satisfying
play.
DARK RAPTURE may not, however,
earn its author the critical praise it deserves—it certainly
didn't in Seattle—because it adheres so strictly to the rules of
the genre. In the written arts, in film, in dance, in pop music,
a creative artist's submission to such rules earns no disrespect.
In theater, it seems we honor work created within rigid
conventions only if the conventions are someone else's: kabuki or kathakali, wayang or noh.
DARK RAPTURE is `noir,' the
genre which crystallized in the 1940s novels and screenplays of
Raymond Chandler and has intermittently borne fruit ever since in
the hands of artists as various as Richard Condon and Wim
Wenders. Good noir is rare on stage.... But his DARK RAPTURE is
the most successful stage essay in the form since Len Jenkins's
marvelous, poetic FIVE OF US.
Like many noir fictions, DARK
RAPTURE is about escape: from the self, from the sane, from the
ordinary. This time the escape hatch is offered by a fire that
leaves the Berkeley Hills home of Ray and Julia Gaines a pile of
smoldering rubble with a charred and unrecognizable corpse
beneath it. Whose corpse is it: Ray's, or a looter's? Just where
was Julia when the house burned down? And what happened to the
brown-paper parcel Julia says she left in Ray's custody? Did it
go up in flames, too, with or without him? Any number of sinister
people want to know.
In classic noir manner, the
story advances tableau by moody tableau from Baja bedroom to Key
West bar deck to Tampa kitchenette, each offering its sharply
etched character cameo, its fragment of information, its new
complication, straight to a conclusion redolent with
irony...."
Roger Downey, American
Theater
originally produced by the Open Space Theater in Seattle.
6 M, 3 F
I S B N: 0-88145-110-X, $8.95
also available in Plays by Eric Overmyer
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