Heavyweight US novelist Don DeLillo's unpublished
one-act play The Word for Snow is set to receive its European premiere in London
next week. Don DeLillo, born November 20, 1936 in New York, is an award-winning American author,
playwright, and essayist. His
works have covered subjects as diverse as television, nuclear war, sports, the
complexities of language, performance art, the Cold War, mathematics, the advent of the digital age,
and global terrorism. He currently lives near New York City in the suburb of Bronxville.
Originally commissioned by US theatre company
Steppenwolf in 2007, the play is DeLillo's response to climate change and tells
of an Earth where the physical world is disappearing, with only the words
describing that world left in their place. The title is drawn from a question
asked during the play: "Are you saying children will build a snowman with the
word for snow?" The play, which
will show at the London literature festival from 10-12 July, will be
directed by Jack McNamara of new company Future Ruins, complete with music,
video and projections.
"We're going all out, bringing in a choir, live music, video," said McNamara.
"It seems from talking to Don that it hasn't really been staged in a full way
before – there have just been quite sparse, simple readings of it, so this is
the first time it has really been turned into a full evening."
The director said his copy of the play was "straight
from DeLillo's typewriter". He had to personally convince the author of Underworld
and White
Noise "that this strange and beautiful piece was something that people had
to see".
The play tells of a modern pilgrim who visits a scholar on a remote mountain
to ask "what is happening?", as the physical world begins to disappear. "It's a
writer really thinking about writing, and the immortality, or mortality, of
language," said McNamara. "I think this piece is very close to his novels in its
style, in comparison to his other plays – his unique type of dialogue is here,
and what people love about his more edgy novels like White Noise is
characteristic of this play. [And] just like his great novels, it is packed with
mind-expanding ideas, beautifully dry humor and is composed of some of the most
stunning lines of dialogue you are likely to hear on stage this year."
DeLillo's other plays include Love-Lies-Bleeding and Valparaiso, the latter
of which was also directed by McNamara to critical acclaim.
Alison Flood
Guardian.co.uk
Some thoughts following "The Word for Snow" at the Purcell Room, London Southbank.
ReplyDeletehttp://willyong.wordpress.com/2012/07/11/are-we-so-unfailingly-human-that-we-invent-the-wrong-catastrophe/