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Haven't you heard it's a battle of words The poster bearer cried "Listen son", said the man with the gun There's room for you inside
BRONKS Theater expresses similar confrontational sentiments in its production of Us/Them, the third and final presentation in Chicago Shakespeare Theater’s Big in Belgium series, running through February 3. The bright, energetic and brief production recounts and deconstructs the 2004 Russian school siege by Chechen separatists. Over 1,100 adults and kids were taken hostage, and a third were killed. Gytha Parmentier and Roman Van Houtven play as children on the almost barren expanse of stage, where they chalk out the school’s layout, then enclose the playing space with a literal string and an Ariadne’s thread of a tale, their POV of the tragedy against a green wall of empty coat hooks. The pair are adept dancers, executing a continuous pas de deux around and through the string maze, like movie spies avoiding infrared, as they tell of the fathers who rushed to the scene, of the dehydration and delirium of the captives, the way the place of learning was eventually detonated. The rope prison also evokes Jacob’s Ladder, an elegantly simple way to construct the unfortunates’ way to heaven. Balloons are bombs. Words are weapons. In the memoir Angela’s Ashes, Frank McCourt told of his squalid childhood through the eyes of a child to mitigate the horror. Writer/director Carly Wijs and her creative team similarly ponder “why terrorism” through innocent eyes.* * * * *
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