Source: Angela Alegria
Leviathan: rage and ritual drowning
A Falmouth University academic is staging a new version of Moby-Dick that culminates in 鈥渁 ritual of communal drowning鈥.
Klaus Kruse, coordinator of the acting course at Falmouth, is also a poet, performer, songwriter and director. In 2007, while studying for his MA at Dartington College of Arts (now incorporated into the university), he co-founded the Living Structures collective. He now serves as its artistic director.
Living Structures specialises in immersive theatre, using music, puppetry, video and sculpture in what they describe as 鈥渕ulti-media events in mind-baffling environments鈥. Their first show, Cart Macabre, which began to be developed in 2007, took groups of 32 people on 鈥渁 nightmare fairground ride鈥 through darkness, with unexpected objects emerging through peepholes, shutters and sliding doors. One critic described the experience as leaving him 鈥渂oth terrifyingly powerless and unexpectedly liberated鈥.
This was followed by Biosphere in 2009 and now by Leviathan. This was first performed at the Matadero in Madrid in 2012, where it was praised for its 鈥渞elentless onslaught of manic inventiveness鈥eautiful choral singing gives way to strange industrial rhythms, or discordant string notes, or screeching seagulls, or crazed chanting.鈥 It continues at the Hackney Downs Studios in London until 26 July.
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As Moby-Dick is a huge book, said Mr Kruse, 鈥渨e had to be very selective. Basically, a crew of people go on a journey, following Captain Ahab and his rage, who leads them to their doom 鈥 and a ritual of communal drowning.鈥 Only 120 people can attend each performance.
In some immersive theatre productions, audience members may wander where they like and so everybody emerges having seen a different show. Mr Kruse prefers spectators to remain where they are while the space is transformed around them, although descending sheets may segregate them into shifting groups and they can decide for themselves to what extent they want to interact with the performers.
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Two weeks of development for Leviathan took place at Falmouth鈥檚 Academy of Music and Theatre Arts before the team moved to Hackney. Recent graduates and students on work placements are involved in the production alongside the creative core of four long-term collaborators and people brought in especially, including aerialists from France. Mr Kruse believes his creative work often feeds into his teaching, as in a module investigating spatial interaction between audiences and performers.
More important, however, he sees Living Structures as at the heart of his research.
鈥淲e are looking at sound,鈥 he explains, 鈥渢he directionality of sound and how it can be used to open up a space that audiences can enter and experience. We are interested in using space as an active ingredient in storytelling. Much is done in Leviathan through spatial transformation 鈥 which takes the audience to a new location or confronts them with a new set of ideas. But it also needs to be fun and engaging. That has to be part of research as well.鈥
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