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Medea (Online)
a borderless Tekhne Epic for live audiences in person and online
Medea is a borderless Tekhne Epic for live audiences in person and online conceived by La MaMa's Great Jones Repertory Company, CultureHub, and Zishan Ugurlu. The epic tells the story of Medea, a refugee whose reality is shattered when she learns of her and her children's looming exile, investigating parallels between the myth and the current refugee crisis by collaging real stories, ancient tongues, and hackable audiovisual systems. A major part of the production is a reimagining of La MaMa’s Medea which was originally composed by the late Elizabeth Swados with direction by Andrei Serban for the company’s celebrated 1972 presentation. The work is experienced in three parts, and the stark, embodied performance is counterpoint to the rich media and technology landscape. Presented in La MaMa’s recently-renovated 74A E. 4 St. building, Medea unfolds across 3 floors and leverages the building-wide data network to break past the walls of the theatre. Using custom-built interactive technologies, an online audience will affect audio, video, and lighting elements throughout the show. The in-person and online versions follow the same story but are distinctly different iterations that allow audiences to attend both experiences for a deeper look into the world of the production. Medea is conceived by the Great Jones Repertory Company, CultureHub, and Zishan Ugurlu, with direction by Zishan Ugurlu and media/technology design and development by CultureHub. The production is performed by the Great Jones Repertory Company with Mia Yoo in the title role, along with Arthur Adair, Mattie Barber-Bockelman, Buffy, Sheree V. Campbell, Billy Clark, Katherine de la Cruz, maura donohue nguyen, George Drance, Bejunior Fallon, Sara Galassini, Cary Gant, John Maria Gutierrez, Onni Johnson, Valois Mickens, lim mui, eugene the poogene, Kiku Sakai, Kim Savarino, Evan Ray Suzuki, Nick Swensen, Juan Pablo Toro, and Morgan Medina-Wild with David Grimaldo, Marco Saavedra, Edafe Okporo. Music direction by Bill Ruyle with musicians Heather Paauwe and Nick Swensen. Dramaturgy by Morgan Jenness. Alexandro Délano Alonso worked with the company for Immigration Consultation. Workshops, research, and interviews have occurred with recent migrant communities coming into New York City. Some of the organizations involved in the project are Make the Road New York, the Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility, and the New York State Youth Leadership Council. The livestream will be produced using LiveLab Broadcaster, a browser based low-latency livestreaming platform that allows for real time interactions with online audiences. The open-source project is supported and used by CultureHub and NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program. It has been used by CultureHub and La MaMa in the following productions: Take 21 (2022), A Few Deep Breaths (2022), Fractals of Prometheus (2023) and Downtown Variety Ukraine Edition (2023).
Audience Role
Using custom-built interactive technologies, an online audience will affect audio, video, and lighting elements throughout the show. The in-person and online versions follow the same story but are distinctly different iterations that allow audiences to attend both experiences for a deeper look into the world of the production.
Ages: 16 +
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6
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3
Years on EI
About La MaMa ETC
La MaMa has been honored with 30+ Obie Awards, dozens of Drama Desk, Bessie Awards, Villager Awards, the 2018 Regional Theatre Tony Award, and most recently a 2023 New York Drama Critics’ Circle Special Citation. They are a creative home to artists and resident companies from around the world, many of whom have made lasting contributions to the arts, including Blue Man Group, Bette Midler, Ed Bullins, Ping Chong, Jackie Curtis, André De Shields, Adrienne Kennedy, Harvey Fierstein, Diane Lane, Playhouse of the Ridiculous, Tom Eyen, Pan Asian Rep, Spiderwoman Theater, Tadeusz Kantor, Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, Mabou Mines, Meredith Monk, Peter Brook, David and Amy Sedaris, Julie Taymor, Kazuo Ohno, Tom O’Horgan, Andrei Serban, Liz Swados, and Andy Warhol. La MaMa’s vision of nurturing new artists and new work from all nations, cultures, races and identities remains as strong today as it was when Ellen Stewart first opened the doors in 1961.