The Jerusalem Post

Step inside the ‘Outsider Room’

Experienti­al Beersheba Fringe Festival collaborat­ion between Israel and the UK: Escape room meets theater meets philosophi­cal novel

- • By JENNIFER GREENBERG

In stripping apart L’Étranger, a 1942 absurdist novel by French philosophe­r Albert Camus, and reassessin­g its relevance in the modern day, Harry Ross has set out to reroute our generation’s divided attention towards such pressing questions as: “What if? What for? What’s it all about?”

“My job is to produce those questions,” explains Ross, co-director of the experiment­al artist collective known as Fruit for the Apocalypse. His contributi­on to the British portion of the Beersheba Fringe Festival – an initiative designed to foster closer ties between Israel and the UK in the fields of art, education, and science – is an interactiv­e escape room based on Camus’s dramatic novel. Actors from Israel’s progressiv­e Clipa Theater will join him and his partner, Helen Scarlett O’Neill, to play different characters from L’Étranger. Each character will guide the audience through “personalit­y tests, match tests, and quizzical games” that put gentrifica­tion and property developmen­t at their core.

Ross shares, “We’re applying the techniques of the escape room to unlock the narrative of the book. At the same time, we are looking at how we are all hostages to our own sense of self. Are we living in bad faith or good faith?” He poses this question to the audience through the context of building a shiny, luxury property developmen­t – inhabitabl­e by artists and the general public – smack dab in the middle of his set: Sha’ar Lanegev Visitor Center.

Neither Ross, O’Neill, nor Ariel Bronz and Idit Herman of Clipa Theater are strangers to site-specific work. Ross and O’Neill, for instance, have both independen­tly worked in cultural centers in the past (for the national heritage organizati­on, the national trust, the national archives, etc.), unlocking hidden history along the way.

Rather than using his performanc­e space as a mere backdrop, Ross has practicall­y turned the Negev Visiting Center into the experienti­al work’s protagonis­t.

“We based The Outsider Room off Camus’s novel because of the desert landscape,” he says, “but were equally drawn to the context of it being a visitor’s center, or an attraction if you will, as it makes [the performanc­e] quite replicable.”

This avant-garde genre of experienti­al performanc­e is currently trending in the UK – previously demonstrat­ed in British contempora­ry choreograp­her Tom Dale’s interactiv­e dance piece, I Infinite, which invited spectators to stand, sit and roam about freely during Tel Aviv’s Fresh Paint Festival in April. While equally committed to the main goal of Christian Duncumb, director of the British Council in Israel, to “show and celebrate a side of the UK that Israelis may not have been exposed to before,” Ross’ intentions for The Outsider Room extend far beyond its inaugural four shows in Beersheba. The British producer believes that the concept has a universal appeal.

“I’ve already been in touch with a few other places willing to host our show in the UK. That’s the interestin­g part – being able to make works with people who live so far away proves that we are all pretty similar at the end of the day. If we can make that work, we can go anywhere.”

Plus, if Ross can work around the language barriers of performing in a Hebrew show, then anything is possible.

Despite his dense, daring take on Fringe Theater, Ross leaves us on a strong note about the craft itself: “It’s just a genre really. It’s very similar to sitting down and watching The Cherry Orchard. The point in theater is to offer people a transcende­nt experience. In this case, we’re offering a transcende­nt experience by having them do something rather than watch something. At the end of the day, the craft is still the same.”

Whether you’re a scholar of Camus or just a fan of escape rooms, The Outsider Room is a multi-layered experience unlike any other. Unlock this absurd world on July 26 at the Beersheba Fringe Festival (iffb7.com).

For more informatio­n about SHOW UK, visit britishcou­ncil.org.il. For more informatio­n about Harry Ross, go to oneillross.co.uk.

 ?? (Oded Bernach) ?? ‘THE OUTSIDER ROOM’
(Oded Bernach) ‘THE OUTSIDER ROOM’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel