San Diego Union-Tribune

OLD GLOBE LAUNCHES INITIATIVE TO REIMAGINE THEATER PRODUCTION IN PANDEMIC WORLD

Artists appointed to work on projects to explore virtual realm

- BY PAM KRAGEN

Six months after San Diego’s oldest and largest theater closed its doors due to the pandemic, the Old Globe today announced an initiative to reimagine the future of theater performanc­es in a POST-COVID world.

The Globe has recruited six theater artists from around the country to grapple with the question: “What is theater now?” In future months, these artists will develop different ideas for projects that can be produced online, or onstage when state and county health officials deem it’s safe for theaters to reopen.

Their ideas include adapting stage plays for online performanc­e to blending live and digital formats for entirely new shows that could run from two minutes in length to several hours. The diverse group will also help expand the company’s dialogue on employing and serving audiences of all ethnicitie­s and genders.

Old Globe Artistic Director Barry Edelstein said facing an uncertain future where the return of live theater could be six months to a year away has been frightenin­g. But it has also been “wonderfull­y liberating,” he said, because it opened a window of time where he and his collaborat­ors can reimagine what theater is and how it will be presented to audiences in the future.

The six artists taking part in the initiative — “What is Theatre Now?” — are freelance director and former Moxie Theatre artistic director Delicia Turner Sonnenberg of San Diego; veteran Old Globe and freelance director James Vásquez of San Diego; theater and film director Johanna Mckeon of New York; director and writer Patricia Mcgregor of San Diego; director, writer, actor and teacher Justin Emeka of Oberlin, Ohio; and Obie and Lilly award-winning director, writer and musician Whitney White of New York.

Edelstein said he came up with the idea of forming the group in April when he realized he couldn’t solve the problem of reinventin­g theater on his own. So with Globe associate artistic director Freedome Bradley-ballentine, he reached out to these six artists who have all worked in the past at the Globe and share an understand­ing of the theater’s identity and its place in the fabric of the community.

“These are people we had very exciting conversati­ons with over the course of their past visits with us,” Edelstein said. “They’re

people who we knew were doing experiment­s in form and in content and also people who are grappling with the other gigantic issue that is roiling the field: the massive racial reckoning that is taking place.”

“We’ve had a couple of meetings with the group and the sparks have flown,” he said. “These are people who have their sleeves rolled up and are really wrestling with these questions, and they’re artists who are trying to fold their already existent practice into this new world. It’s really exciting.”

Edelstein said the group’s mission is open-ended. They’re all working independen­tly

on their own projects and come together on Zoom once a month to discuss their progress. Eventually these ideas will be shared with the public. Not all them will end up online or onstage, but Edelstein said he and Bradley-ballentine hope to learn a lot through the process.

Over the past six months, the Globe has successful­ly transition­ed its arts engagement and workshop programs online, generating more than 409,000 combined views from as far away as New Zealand. While the viewers are there, Edelstein said most theaters have been unsuccessf­ul at making money from their online programmin­g. He wonders whether selling tickets to online shows should be a priority in a time of crisis.

“We’re thinking about this notion of theater as a public good,” he said. “Theater obliges us to be a little less transactio­nal in these moments and more about our relationsh­ip with the community and the value we want to provide.”

Edelstein described the recent comment by national health adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci that live theater might not return until the end of 2021 as “a jawdroppin­g moment.” But he said Globe fans have been patient and very supportive since its stages went dark in March.

“Mostly what we’re hearing is a lot of love,” he said. “I’m so thankful for the unconditio­nal support of San Diego for the Globe and what it’s going through.”

 ??  ?? The artists participat­ing in The Old Globe’s “What is Theatre Now?” initiative are: (from left) Delicia Turner Sonnenberg, James Vásquez, Johanna Mckeon, Justin Emeka, Patricia Mcgregor and Whitney White.
The artists participat­ing in The Old Globe’s “What is Theatre Now?” initiative are: (from left) Delicia Turner Sonnenberg, James Vásquez, Johanna Mckeon, Justin Emeka, Patricia Mcgregor and Whitney White.
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