Attempts on Her Life
Written by Martin Crimp

Recommended for Mature Audiences.

Directed by Matt Slaybaugh

Featuring Emily Bach, Susie Gerald, Ellen Knolls, Joyce Leahy, Shanelle Marie, Krista Lively Stauffer, Dayle Towarnicky

Featured dancer: Meghan Durham

Video by Brant Jones
Choreography by Karl Rogers
Lighting Design by Darin Keesing
Sound Design by Dave Wallingford
Costumes by Michelle Whited
Stage Management by Adam Humphrey

All performances @
The Columbus Performing Arts Center
Van Fleet Theatre
549 Franklin Ave.

CLICK HERE for a map and to get directions.

Thursday, May 13 @ 8pm + TALKBACK
Friday, May 14 @ 8pm + TALKBACK
Saturday, May 15 @ 8pm + TALKBACK
Sunday, May 16 @ 2pm

Thursday, May 20 @ 8pm + TALKBACK
Friday, May 21 @ 8pm + TALKBACK
Saturday, May 22 @ 8pm

GET TICKETS HERE

Call 614-558-7408 for more info or to make reservations.

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FROM the BLOG

Did she? Or didn't she?

AVLT presents a multi-media spectacular about one-woman's quest for her true self.

British playwright Martin Crimp's rarely-performed 1997 play consists of seventeen apparently disconnected scenes of mutually contradictory descriptions of an absent protagonist, a woman talked of as if she were a terrorist, a victim, a betrayed wife, a vicious racist, the daughter of grieving parents, an self-destructive artist, and more. It's been variously described by critics as cryptic, elusive, and fragmented.

Recommended for Mature Audiences.

Our Approach: Wash. Rinse. Repeat.

Posted by Slay on Sunday, April 18, 2010

Martin Crimp’s “Attempts on Her Life” is rarely performed, and one good reason is that the script hands you a lot of difficulties right off the back.

Here’s a peek.

As you’ll notice, there are no character names next to the lines. In fact, there are no character names anywhere in the script. Nor does Mr. Crimp provide any info on locale, or any stage directions. In short, everything but the dialogue is left to the director and actors to devise.

Lucky for us, devising theatre is our speciality. But how does it work?

As the director, I’ve taken the liberty of assigning a few actors to each scene. At the first rehearsal of the scene we begin by reading it aloud. In the spirit of the work, we haven’t assigned characters or lines yet, so the actors just jump in when they feel like it. They run each other over, speak simultaneously, take turns, and have a free-from exploration of the words in the scene.

Then we begin the long process of discussing “what the scene is about” ... I ask a lot of open questions. “Who does it feel like?” “Why are they talking about this?” “How does this connect to the rest of the play?” Believe it or not, after 45 minutes or so of this, we’ve actually made some decisions about what the scene could be. “It’s possible” is an oft-repeated phrase in these sessions.

Then, with few ideas under our belt, we read again, slowly assigning lines to actors based on any available logic. Repeating this process of talking and making small decisions, we eventually arrive at something concrete enough to feel good about, but open enough that it can change and shift in response to what we discover about the rest of the play.

We’re in the midst of doing that 17 times, once for each of the scenes. Then, when we know a few things about the play as a whole, we’ll zoom in and make more decisions. What’s that they say? Wash, rinse, repeat? That’s us right now.