Los Angeles Times

Geffen discovers the magic of at- home theater

Saturday is your last chance to join the audience for Helder Guimarães’ ‘Present.’

- BY JESSICA GELT

Is box- office magic even a thing during the coronaviru­s pandemic? It is when the show stars a sleight- of- hand master who can perform jawdroppin­g tricks, erase the sense of isolation for theater-starved audiences — and sell more than 6,000 tickets for a single evening on Zoom.

The show is called “The Present,” the magician is Helder Guimarães and the theater that captured lightning in a pandemic bottle is the Geffen Playhouse, which launched its Geffen Stayhouse banner to keep audiences digitally engaged after COVID- 19 closed theaters nationally.

“The Present,” which had its first performanc­e on May 7, quickly achieved local phenom status and was ex-

tended three times. By the grand finale Saturday, Guimarães will have logged 251 sold- out shows. He has performed up to 13 times per week, and more than 70 shows have been buyouts, meaning a single group or entity bought all 25 Zoom slots for a specific performanc­e.

Famous faces have been logging on, including Laura Dern, Mark Hamill, Patton Oswalt, Billy Crystal and

Laurie Metcalf.

“At the end of the day, the thing that is so satisfying is that it has kept the staff engaged, kept our audience engaged and enhanced the Geffen stage brand,” Geffen Executive Director Gil Cates Jr. said. “It’s great in terms of energy.”

When all is said and done, Cates said, “The Present” will have grossed more than $ 700,000, an astronomic­al figure for regional theaters scrambling, often blindly, to devise entertainm­ent for a virtual audience. Cates compared that number to what a typical show in the Geffen’s 500- seat mainstage auditorium might gross during a nonpandemi­c five- week run — if heavily promoted and highly successful.

Tickets for “The Present” averaged $ 95 per household. The cost included a “mystery box,” mailed to homes before the performanc­e, which contained props for Guimarães’ story and allowed audience members to participat­e in his tricks.

The grand finale Saturday, which has no audience cap, will allow people to watch ( but not participat­e in the interactiv­e portions of the show) for $ 25. With more than 6,500 households signed up so far, that’s at least $ 162,500 for a single performanc­e. For an additional $ 15, viewers can receive a “mystery envelope” that contains a limited number of items in the mystery box.

“We’re running a wartime- level production workshop at the Geffen, rolling out boxes instead of tanks,” artistic director Matt Shakman told The Times in an interview about the transition from in- person to virtual production­s back in May.

The mystery boxes — mailed to audience members in 30 countries including Denmark, Poland, Singapore and Ukraine, the Geffen said — have been key to the magic, turning a solo viewing experience into a communal interactiv­e activity.

Guimarães performs the show from a corner of his apartment. His fiancée, Catarina Marques, operates the camera, and producer Frank Marshall of the “Jurassic Park” and “Indiana Jones” franchises directs remotely.

The show, experience­d by viewers wherever they choose ( Cates said one participan­t watched from a Jacuzzi), somehow manages to erase the social distance that has defined many people’s experience of the world during the pandemic.

Times theater critic

Charles McNulty called the viewing experience “the closest approximat­ion I’ve had to being in a theater since the pandemic closed the venues. The show contains a slew of card tricks, but the real sleight- of- hand is the transforma­tion of digital into theatrical space.”

The success of “The Present” could be elusive to other theater companies, which may not be able to match the wizardry of Guimarães’ magic — or which may have no interest in the genre. But as McNulty pointed out, the show’s success is built on other factors too — not the least of which is the storytelli­ng skill of Guimarães, who frames his tricks with the tale of being quarantine­d as a child after he was hit by a car.

It’s also key that at a time of such turmoil, the show is pure escapism. It’s fun. If Zoom screen smiles are any indication, the audience logs out happy.

“Helder is a great storytelle­r,” Cates said, “and he related to people about this moment we are in.”

 ?? DANIA MAXWELL LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? MAGICIAN Helder Guimarães in an in- camera double- exposure portrait shot in Griffith Park.
DANIA MAXWELL LOS ANGELES TIMES MAGICIAN Helder Guimarães in an in- camera double- exposure portrait shot in Griffith Park.

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