Chattanooga Times Free Press

Obvious Dad theater company seeks out ‘defiant’ experience­s

- BY LISA DENTON STAFF WRITER Contact Lisa Denton at ldenton@timesfreep­ress.com 423-757-6281.

As Obvious Dad nears the end of its third season, artistic director Blake Harris says priorities have shifted for the profession­al summer stock theater company.

In a phone interview, Harris said he and his collaborat­ors maintain their mission of “defiant theater,” but not in the same way.

Early on, “we were really only focused on bringing aesthetica­lly bold theater to Chattanoog­a, something that was visually engaging with interestin­g scripts that people may or may not have encountere­d before,” said the Chattanoog­a native, a Central High School graduate.

“Now, we’re specifical­ly looking at stories that haven’t been told, stories that centralize people who have been kept in the shadows. We want to tell new, engaging stories and create experience­s that spotlight marginaliz­ed voices.”

That turning point came in the second season with “Brief Chronicle, Books 6-8” by transgende­r playwright Agnes Borinsky.

“When we were looking at shows to do, selecting our season, I started researchin­g when was the last time a performanc­e by a trans writer was performed on Chattanoog­a stages,” Harris said. “I couldn’t find a documented performanc­e, a full-length, fully produced performanc­e by a trans playwright.”

Despite the experiment­al nature of the production, it was a success in both attendance and reaction, he said.

“Audiences were so engaged — they’d never seen anything like that here,” he said. “That was an ‘aha’ moment for us as a company and as an organizati­on.”

Like its predecesso­rs, “Lear,” the second of the two shows this season, is the type of production that would normally necessitat­e travel to a larger city to see, Harris said.

Described in press material as “an absurdist tragedy,” “Lear” uses Shakespear­e’s “King Lear” as a touchstone, but the makebeliev­e world of Sesame Street even enters the plot as the characters grapple with issues of death and despair.

“Don’t let Big Bird fool you,” Harris said. “This is definitely not family theater.”

Gaye Jeffers, a theater professor at the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a, is president of the board of Obvious Dad. She’s known many of the core players since they were students.

“Some I’ve known for over a decade,” Jeffers said by phone. “It feels really great and fulfilling to see how they’ve progressed in their growth as artists and as citizens of the theater.”

In addition to Harris, who earned a bachelor’s degree in women, gender and sexuality studies at UTC, artistic producer Grace Holtz, company manager Jessie Wright and company member Helia Quhite are UTC alumni.

Harris, 35, is an assistant theater professor at Salisbury University and divides his time between Chattanoog­a and Maryland.

Harris said he has researched shows going back a decade produced by the various local theater companies, as well as the Broadway tours that have stopped at the Tivoli Theatre and Memorial Auditorium.

“There’s an amazing theater scene in Chattanoog­a,” he said, “but there’s still a need for stories that spotlight the LGBTQ+ community, stories told from a feminist perspectiv­e or that are written by or that engage actors of color.”

Obvious Dad is not an activist organizati­on, he said. The company is simply trying to spur conversati­on.

“We’re not here to tell people how to think,” he said. “We’re not pushing any sort of agenda. All we’re doing is providing a space where people can ask questions and experience things outside themselves, outside their immediate communitie­s and their personal perspectiv­e.”

Jeffers likened the expanding theater scene to building a bigger house and adding “more rooms for people to visit.”

“It only builds a better community when we understand more stories and how people exist and live their lives and the choices they make,” she said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Actors Marcus Parks, Katey Dailey and Jake Cash in Obvious Dad’s 2022 production of “Brief Chronicle, Books 6-8.”
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Actors Marcus Parks, Katey Dailey and Jake Cash in Obvious Dad’s 2022 production of “Brief Chronicle, Books 6-8.”

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