DAD ART PERFORMANCE/HEALING/COLLAGE

DAD ART PERFORMANCE/HEALING/COLLAGE

Subject: DAD ART PERFORMANCE: SOME INFORMATION: LINDA MARY MONTANO for May 2017 : Vortex; BONNIE CULLUM

DAD ART PERFORMANCE/HEALING COLLAGE: SOME  INFORMATION: A 3 HOUR EXPERIENCE

DAD ART PERFORMANCE/HEALING COLLAGE is an opportunity for a willing community to see, learn about, interact with and experience aesthetically/performatively the old age, sickness and death of my father Henry Joseph Montano as life/art. In coming into contact with another person’s life story and their eventual death, we will see, be reminded of and participate in the feelings associated with our own deaths. That is important work.
 The video is a document of the time I took care of my father from 1998-2005 in Saugerties NY, after I left  UT Austin.

Death, a tabooed subject and not always out of the closet of fear and dread, must be aesthetically exposed/experienced as the natural event that it is. Why? To prepare us courageously for our own inevitable deaths and help us all make some alliance and friend with that fact. We all share life and we all will experience the end game. Let us collectively help each other do that.
I have found that by opening doors to the SUBJECT of death, I am asking death  for  friendship and knowledge and understanding. In doing so,
my personal spiritual journey and curiosity are becoming educated to our natural and shred human situation. A good thing, I think..

THE PERFORMANCE:

CAST OF VOLUNTEERS:
1. One or two MC’s. They will have/use a whistle or a suitable hand held/blown noise device so that they interrupt the “solemnity” of both the images on video and performative actions with a fetivity/jesterlyness but  dignified sacredness.
2. The secretary who writes down “letters to death” dictated by the audience members who come onstage and visit the secretary at their desk. The secretary can instruct the audience member what to do. The audience member talks, the secretary writes. It can be kept as long or short as it takes. It begins with DEAR DEATH……..
3. The water-giver. One person who offers water to audience members who come to them for water. It can be  a glass of water, a spritz of rose water from a spritz bottle, a bowl of water that the audience member drinks from or puts their finger in to bring to a place in their body that needs healing. This is designed by the “water person.” The water giver can instruct the audience member what to do.
4. The two grief counselors who sit in front of an empty chair and when an audience member sits down, they listen to stories of death told by members of the audience visiting them onstage at the death-counselor station. They can say,” Do you want to tell me about death?” Then just listen.  No advice is needed from the counselors.
5. The audience members come to the mic to say the name of the person they are remembering who has died.  Or  the mic can be  passed around in the audience by the MC’s.  . They are welcome to say the names of people who have died who they want to remember. They will be invited to say the name or to say this: IM SORRY…… I FORGIVE YOU AND I FORGIVE MYSELF. Their choice. The MC occasionally helps this to happen. If there is a written program handed out to the audience before the event, this will be written in the program so they can read it.
6. The singer. Montano will sing 7 songs, one every 20 minutes to honor and remember her father’s love of music, time in his band where he played trumpet and my mother sang. The MC calls me to the microphone to do this, 7 times at designated and equally spaced times.
7. The parade leader will comes up at the end of the performance and leads us all outside so we can burn the letters to death in a container. There can be many parade leaders. They also lead us in dancing ADDICTED TO LOVE via a boombox sound system after the burning of the letters. They can make festive parade “flags” or have sticks with yarn on them, things to bring attention to the parade and are attractive and make people want to follow. Musical  Instruments/singing can be included if they want. The parade person/persons can come into the performance space and invite people to follow them via verbal instruction or if the mood needs they can use hand gestures/silence.  If the mood calls for it, they can walk out in silence. This instruction  can also be  included in the program notes.

All is happening simultaneously.  There is no fixed focus. Nothing that can’t be talked over or interrupted. There are no mistakes  possible in this experience because it is an event of natural occurrences and over-lapping experiences.

THE   STAGE AND PROPS:

FRONT STAGE/MID STAGE: The one or two MC’s will stand and move around and interact with the audience. They will either share a mic or there will be two mics for the MC’s.  The second or third mic will be set for reverb/digital delay for Linda when she sings and also for audience when they come up to say the names of their deceased friends.

TO THE RIGHT OF THE MC’S  FACING THE AUDIENCE: There will be four chairs next to each other. The two grief counselors will sit in two of them, side-ways to audience. Audience members will sit in the empty chairs to talk with the grief counsellors who, by the way, are just listening to stories. They have no need to know how to counsel.
The MC’s will see when there is a need for an audience member to come to a chair or go to the water station or to write a letter. They will keep the flow going but in a  very scared and “ritualistic” manner.

BACK STAGE/ RIGHT BACK: There is a table. The letters to death secretary will sit with their back to the audience with a death mask on the back of their head. They face the person writing the letters. They need paper and a pen to write with. Table and two chairs.

BACK STAGE/BACK LEFT: The water giver is in  back of a table. Standing. On the table are the things they choose to use to offer water toaudience members.

LEFT STAGE/ FRONT: Microphone is there for audience members who want to hhonor their friends with their frind’s name or do the I’m Sorry incantation. But also they can do this when the MC’s pass their mic to the siting audience. I will use this microphone when I come up to sing so it has to be calibrated for my need to have reverb or digital delay.

LIGHTING:
Each station can be lit from above, shining down if that is appropriate. But lighting needs to be  done in a way that makes it possible for audience members to walk onto the stage.

SOUND:
There are 4 layers of sound:
1.  Sound from the video.
2.  Sound from the MC’s mic on a mic stand.
3. Sound from my mic on a mic stand, adjusted for delay.
4. Sound for the “music” that I sing. I sing aling with either a trumpet or a guitar accompaniment. I will bring a cd of this music. It is to be calibrated so whenever I get up to sing and indicate a signal to begin, the “next” song is played.
5. Sound for ADDICTED TO LOVE outside around the fire which can be a campfire if you wish. This  sound can be on a boombox, or anything simple but loud.

ACTIONS:
As we walk onstage, there will be a you tube of bird sound/images, low volume already playing as people come into the theatre.
Each actor will go to the standing mic  center stage and say their name and will simply say what they will be  doing.
We go to our stations and perform the actions, not “paying attention” to the video onscreen because you will have seen it before the night of the performance via you tube or vimeo. It is important that everyone pay attention to their action and not to the screen or anyone else’s action. This concentration will help make the energy of the performance more focused.
At the end of the video, after the credits, we leave via the front door while humming one note. The parade people will come to gather each of us . Parade people also gather the audience members and we all go outside, form a circle around the burning container. After the LETTERS TO DEATH are  burned,  we then all dance to ADDICTED TO LOVE.

COSTUMES:
Please see Robert Graham’s ADDICTED TO LOVE  youtube before the performance. Please wear:
1. BLACK CLOTHES: As nice as possible. Everything black.
2. GREAT SHOES: In keeping with a “funeral home” look. Black. Don’t buy anything but they need to look good.
3. FABULOUS HAIR OR WIG: Very Glamour/Vogue. Cover all tattoos. Somber but Glam look.
4. EXCESSIVE MAKEUP: So it looks glamorous.
5. SUNGLASSES:  Can be taken on and off, but walk out in them. If you need to take them off to make eye contact with an audience member at your station, please feel free to do so. Healing contact is most important.
6. Please bring you costume to the rehearsal. More than one if you have a question.

PROPS:
1. Four chairs for grief counsellors.
2. Table and two chairs for secretary.
3. Table and water props for water giver.
4. Sound makers for MC’s.
5. Festive things for parade leaders.

LINDA BRING:
1. DVD
2. CD of trumpet/ guitar.
3. Costume and wig, sunglasses and make up.