Cosmic unity2/21/2023 ![]() The Living Gallery is largely visible from the seating area for Unorthodox Methods, if you choose to look around during the show, and indeed I found a few times I had my head on a swivel noticing something I hadn’t seen during my earlier walkthrough. The space can be tight as the audience packs in, so be mindful of the artworks that are strewn over the ground and try not to step on anything as you work your way through. It’s hard to describe, other than to say that every single component of the gallery, from painted lids hung as mobiles and strewn on the floor to a salvaged Tesla lamp to a sketch of a “shooting” star, feels like it belongs there. The rest of the space, designed by Annemarie Branco and including works by a dozen makers and artists, feels part 1990s bowl-in-the-dark night, part flea market, and part junkyard. ![]() The stage backdrop is collaged newspapers and advertisements with the occasional Soviet propaganda-inspired poster by Kayce Dygert-usually involving dogs-visible in full color above the newsprint. I was expecting The Living Gallery to be a linear space with a stage at one end instead, the playing space for Unorthodox Methods is in the midst of the circular path one follows around the gallery, making the play as much of an installation as it is a work of drama. And the script similarly feels in some ways very true to Russian drama-think Chekhov at his silliest rather than his most serious-although Unorthodox Methods is itself a new work. Stoller and Sturtridge are charming, playing their parts with a sort of wide-eyed innocence you wouldn’t think to attribute to cosmonauts (even of the wannabe variety), but there’s still a Soviet resourcefulness and determination behind the fancy. There’s a very cute stuffed dog who may or may not itself be going to space, a baby spider plant, and an assortment of colored pencils used in creating increasingly daring ideas for space travel. ![]() There is a small trampoline onstage, and a refrigerator that also serves as a question box. ![]() It’s fortunate that both Fringe and Launch Point-the Spring Arts district venue hosting The Living Gallery-were able to accommodate this extended run, because Unorthodox Methods is truly delightful, and the surrounding installation (inspired by Ilya Kabakov’s The Man Who Flew Into Space From His Apartment) a joy to peruse.ĭirected by Anastassia Vertjanova, Unorthodox Methods of Cosmic Flight tells the story of Breezy (Ella Stoller) and Ember (Noah Sturtridge), two young wannabe cosmonauts who want to figure out their own way into space. However, in a scenario all too familiar in 2022, most of the original Unorthodox Methods run was canceled after Covid hit the cast, and new performance dates were added to the weekend following the festival’s official close. ![]()
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