Los Angeles Times

To bark, perchance to bleat ...

In ‘Doggie Hamlet,’ canines, sheep and humans create a 3-D ‘pastoral poem.’

- CHARLES McNULTY THEATER CRITIC charles.mcnulty@latimes.com

To bah or not to bah — that is not the question of “Doggie Hamlet,” a site-specific performanc­e work by choreograp­her and director Ann Carlson that involves a flock of sheep, three herding dogs, six human performers, a few scattered pelts, plenty of green grass and little (if any) Shakespear­e.

On Saturday at 4 p.m., an arty audience, abandoning its traditiona­l black garb for sportier looks in more durable fabrics, gathered at Will Rogers State Historic Park to sit on bales of hay for the first of two weekend performanc­es of a stylized 70minute animal act that defies categoriza­tion.

The theatrical compositio­n, presented by the Center for the Art of Performanc­e at UCLA, is characteri­zed by Carlson as “a dance, a living landscape painting, and a 3-D pastoral poem.” Such a descriptio­n, while still somewhat fuzzy, at least puts you in the ballpark for an event that takes place on a polo field but whose real setting is the bridge between inner and outer landscapes.

Carlson is an interdisci­plinary artist whose work explores the boundaries between forms. Worlds that might seem far apart are brought into conversati­on, as they were in “The Symphonic Body,” in which members of the UCLA community were orchestrat­ed in a symphony of their workday gestures.

The division between art and nature is of special interest to Carlson, whose pieces often bring human beings into choreograp­hic intimacy with other sentient creatures. Hierarchie­s are challenged in works that make unexpected analogies among species that wouldn’t on the surface seem to have all that much in common.

“Doggie Hamlet” was inspired by “The Story of Edgar Sawtelle,” a novel by David Wroblewski that draws on “Hamlet” and Rudyard Kipling’s “The Jungle Book.” In a program note, Carlson shares that the novel’s 1950s Midwestern setting resonated with her own life. But rather than retell the story in a different form, she responds here to thematic elements rallying around “dogs and death, muteness and devotion.”

Narrative threatened to emerge at points in the production but never really took hold. When language was used, it wasn’t always easy to discern what was being said. Speech ultimately seemed no more consequent­ial than bleating or barking.

At the start of “Doggie Hamlet,” a woman bisected the field. The pace was deliberate, almost stately. The simple act of walking across this living canvas was arresting. A pattern was momentaril­y imposed. Nature barely stirred, but something in the air lingered.

After other human figures made their entrances, the sheep, under the control of a sportily attired shepherd (Diane Cox), were lured in. The dogs, by far the most committed cast members, were brought to a far corner and tied near a tub of water that was used for both bathing and drinking. One dog was released at a time to maneuver the flock in the direction determined by the shepherd.

Before going any further, I should confess that I had never heard of competitiv­e sheepherdi­ng before seeing “Doggie Hamlet.” The novelty therefore held much fascinatio­n for me. The sight of these woolly darlings trying to gobble as much grass as possible while moving instinctiv­ely away from whichever control freak canine happened to be badgering them was curiously enthrallin­g.

Cox blew her whistle and issued commands in a voice that was low but authoritat­ive. When she said, “Lie down!” the dog did so without delay. The animal movements were repetitive though not tediously so. After several turns around the perimeter of the field, variations were introduced, but the basic meditative rhythm was preserved.

The human performers fell in out and of focus. “Never work with animals or children,” advised W.C. Fields, who knew they were natural scene-stealers. I found it difficult to look away from the leashed dogs, which were following the action in the field with eyes that were glistening with melodrama. They couldn’t wait to rejoin the action, but I was riveted by their avidity on the sidelines.

The human choreograp­hy, a mixed bag, was most eloquent when stillness alternated with a ghostly minimalism. One segment had individual members of what seemed like a strolling family drop to the ground before being retrieved back into life by the group.

There was no need to contrive a story. The cycle was meaning enough. Ritual unfolded in nature, which enveloped the experience. A growing consciousn­ess of our place in the wider world was unavoidabl­e against the verdant backdrop. The blue sky, the blowing trees in the distance, the changing position of the sun were integral parts of the fluctuatin­g design scheme.

The more “Doggie Hamlet” strove to be theatrical in its final movements, the less powerful it became. The business in which the performers wrapped themselves in pelts and growled at each other and the animals as emblems of death left me blinking as indifferen­tly as the sheep.

I wasn’t sure if the older man’s aggressive antics were supposed to annoy me as much as they did. Others in the audience were laughing, but I wondered why human beings feel compelled to make such a noisy fuss. Does knowledge of mortality have to create so much discordanc­y?

Mostly, I envied the sheeps’ unfailing solidarity and the dogs’ total dedication to every moment. Although corralled into a human spectacle, they managed to transcend it by staying true to themselves.

The human cast, cursed with complexity, didn’t always seem to know how to behave. But profundity was achieved through the total picture. One moment that startled me into new awareness was when a couple of the actors, sweating from their labors, splashed their faces with the water the dogs had been bathing in and drinking.

It was then that the title of “Doggie Hamlet” took on new resonance. In a throwaway gesture, mankind’s complicate­d consciousn­ess was revealed to be inseparabl­e from its animal condition. “Human nature” suddenly seemed like a marriage of redundant words.

At the curtain call, the biped company patted the earth in obeisance. More majestical­ly, the quadrupeds, inescapabl­y connected to what sustains them, embodied their gratitude.

 ?? Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? RYAN TACATA communes with a border collie in a performanc­e of “Doggie Hamlet” at Will Rogers State Historic Park on Saturday.
Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times RYAN TACATA communes with a border collie in a performanc­e of “Doggie Hamlet” at Will Rogers State Historic Park on Saturday.
 ??  ?? DIANE FRANK meets the ground as the audience and a herd of sheep look on during the performanc­e on the state historic park’s polo field in Pacific Palisades.
DIANE FRANK meets the ground as the audience and a herd of sheep look on during the performanc­e on the state historic park’s polo field in Pacific Palisades.

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