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![]() Click for stage events Space Game Oracle Theatre wants you off that couch
If you so desired, you could be entertained twenty-four/seven--hook up
your iPod, log online, turn on the TV--tune in, turn on, drop out. You
certainly don't have to leave the house. Katie Hawkey, creator and
director of Oracle Productions' "Show Game Live! From the Milky Way!"
wants to put an end to this technological ennui. Ironically quoting the
TV station Nickelodeon, she states, "Don't just sit there. If you want
good things to happen, make them happen." What Hawkey "made happen"
is "Show Game Live!"--a quick jolt to the gray tissue and a sharp kick
in the you-know-what.
"Show Game Live! From the Milky Way" parodies popular and forgotten
game shows alike--from the iconic "Jeopardy!" to that parade of human
idiocy, "Street Smarts." Yes, "Saturday Night Live" has been
lampooning "Celebrity Jeopardy!" for years (Oh, Sean Connery and his
dirty mind), but "Show Game Live!" has a twist. Instead of taking
place in Wisconsin, or some equally mundane locale, "Show Game Live!"
is filmed in the Milky Way. In addition, the host is a purple-faced
suave alien named Rip Kipley and all the contestants are slovenly
earthlings abducted from our very own planet Earth. Each performance,
the questions change and the actors, who just happen to be pop-culture
fiends, answer from their own vast stores of useless knowledge. That
means that each performance ends differently, with a new winner every
night.
The audience is introduced to the characters by way of video
introduction; Lindsay is an assistant manager at Catharine's Plus Size
Clothing and designs big-boned couture for her padded Barbies, Adam is a
tollbooth worker whipped by his lizard-loving lady friend and Dan is a
personal trainer with an affinity for James Blunt. "When [the audience]
first meets the characters they are boring, humdrum people with apathy
about their own life," Hawkey says. "But as they are pushed farther
and farther by the aliens they realize that they have the power to move
forward."
When you first enter the Oracle Theatre you snake down a hallway
hung with insulation and wires meant to mimic the inside of a spaceship.
Passing the gift shop, where you can pick up a clapper or a "Show Game
Live!" t-shirt, you emerge into a black box so small that it might as
well be called a black closet. Barely forty seats fill the theater and
the front row practically sits on stage, which is decked out like the
set of a game show with colorful podiums, graphics and all. On the right
hangs a flat-screen TV used to introduce the characters and to screen
intergalactic commercials hawking everything from energy drinks to
space-age sexual enhancers.
The Oracle Theatre is known for making use of multimedia, which
Katie Hawkey says is "an interesting way to take it back from big media
and take it back to a small scale where people are involved. The crowd
is the last actor; it doesn't work if they don't clap." This
interactive component was particularly crucial to the game-show
atmosphere in which "the appeal is the real people on stage, the fact
that you sympathize with them, you want to be part of it. You want to be
up there." The intimacy of the miniature black box brings the audience
into the show, compelling them to examine themselves in the context of a
culture obsessed with the exploits of K-Fed and TomKat.
"The average American day consists of two parts: work and leisure
time," writer and assistant director Laura K. Smith points out in her
program notes. Most of the time we opt to fill our leisure time with
reruns of "Next" or "My Super Sweet Sixteen," but once in a while
we'll feel the need to get some "culture" and go to a play. It may not
be its ultimate goal, but "Show Game Live!" demonstrates how solitary
activities, such as watching TV, have become America's new
pastimes--instead of crying "Take me out to the ballgame," we sigh,
"I'll TiVo it instead." Crammed into the Oracle Theatre, people are
forced to socialize, both with the actors on stage and the guy next to
you impeding on your "personal space." That's all that Katie Hawkey
wants, ultimately--for you to get off the couch and do something new.
"I hope people come out, have fun and get this message," she says. She
quickly adds, "And, most importantly, I hope they have a good time." "Show Game Live! From the Milky Way!" runs at Oracle Theatre,
3809 North Broadway, (773)244-2980. $15-$20. Through December 17.
Also by Brenna Ehrlich Guitar Gold
Dead Alive
Underworldly
Monster Mash
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