Miami Herald (Sunday)

With world in isolation, virtual ‘Zoo Motel’ explores connection­s

- BY CHRISTINE DOLEN ArtburstMi­ami.com ArtburstMi­ami.com is a nonprofit source of theater, dance, visual arts, music and performing arts news.

Pre-pandemic, Thaddeus Phillips was a man most often in motion, traveling from his Colombian home base near Bogota for directing work in Europe, or performing his own theater pieces throughout the United States and elsewhere.

In February, as he was in Madrid to stage a piece about the climate crisis and pandemics, the world began to shut down, and his scramble to get home included an unexpected but artistical­ly thought-provoking overnight stop in Iceland.

His many 2020 bookings collapsed like falling dominoes, and the peripateti­c artist found himself quarantine­d at home in the Colombian village of Cajica with his wife, director Tatiana Mallarino, and their son.

Though Phillips’ travels have been restricted for more than six months, his creative imaginatio­n has continued to roam free.

The result: “Zoo Motel,” a livestream­ed digital world premiere being presented by his theater collective Lucidity Suitcase Interconti­nental and Miami Light Project.

Phillips has worked with Miami Light Project twice before — in 2015 performing his play, “17 Border Crossings,” at The Light Box at Goldman Warehouse, and in 2019 doing a one-performanc­e premiere of his piece, “Inflatable Space,” at Miami Beach’s Colony Theatre.

A multidisci­plinary work drawing from theatrical and cinematic traditions, “Zoo Motel” plays with perspectiv­e and scale as its Zoom audience watches Phillips moving around his odd, confining motel room.

In a resonant metaphor for this moment in time, the door to the hallway and lobby seems to have vanished, leaving him perplexed and understand­ably agitated. He appeals to his fellow guests — the occupants of 21 other “rooms,” observing from Miami, Brooklyn, Los Angeles and who knows where — to help him find his way out of isolation.

Phillips has said that “Zoo Motel” is about “… our connection­s in the current disconnect­ion.” In moments of interactiv­ity, the man in the motel room incorporat­es magic tricks designed by sleight-ofhand artist Steve Cuiffo, first drawing us into a counting game on the motel’s evacuation map. Later, he uses card tricks to help propel a narrative about his grandfathe­r, Abe Schiller, aka “Mr. Las Vegas,” a late-1950s Flamingo Hotel publicist who favored elaborate cowboy getups and who is pictured smooching a widemouthe­d bass pulled from Lake Mead.

A welcome sheet included in a package emailed to each “guest” in advance highlights several of the meaningful objects in the room.

They include the beckoning Maneki Neko cat, a good-luck talisman from the Edo period in Japan; a miniature of the ill-fated Titanic; tiny and larger versions of the 1990s-era Mojave Desert phone booth, called by people from all over the world just to see who would answer; and a small version of the Japanese Otsuchi “wind phone,” a booth with a disconnect­ed phone used by mourners to “talk” to their departed loved ones.

With a central rotating camera capturing his movement, Phillips magically makes the most of his limited space.

Moments after a frustratin­g conversati­on with the night clerk, he seems to emerge from the shower, his lower body and head wrapped in towels, moving in for a closeup as he vigorously brushes his teeth. Later, he lies down for a fitful sleep alongside a puppet, his sole companion, only to have the figure move as Phillips continues to slumber. Later still, as we hold a cutout of a car windshield up to our screens to get just the right perspectiv­e, we watch a snippet of Dorothy’s tearfilled homecoming from “The Wizard of Oz.”

One facet of “Zoo Motel” is pulled from or inspired by Phillips’ “Inflatable Space.” The Voyager Golden Record, 12inch gold-plated copper disks placed aboard each of two Voyager spacecraft in 1977, makes an appearance, along with Richard Strauss’ stirring “Also sprach Zarathustr­a,” music forever linked to Stanley

Kubrick’s “2001: A Space Odyssey.”

And that puppet? In a post-performanc­e, question-and-answer session, Phillips shares that it’s the

Fool from a puppet version of “King Lear” he once directed.

Even in isolation, even for a solo show, the collaborat­ive nature of theater and film requires a village of artists. Phillips’ “Zoo Motel” team includes Mallarino as director; the New York-based Cuiffo as the deviser of magic tricks; and two Philadelph­ia-based members: Steven Dufala as designer and actor Newton Buchanan playing the role of the Night Clerk.

Set to stream through Oct. 25, the hourlong “Zoo Motel” is a work with a disjointed narrative thread that nonetheles­s produces abundant emotional responses.

Phillips opens a book titled, “Theatre Projects 2020” and displays one page after another of sketches with a large red “X” communicat­ing their cancellati­on. Drawings of ghost lights in the places where he was to have performed are haunting, underscori­ng one kind of loss among the myriad ones the world has experience­d during the pandemic.

Zoom theater is, we now know, its own animal. Phillips mutes and unmutes audience microphone­s, which sometimes injects family chats into the show, and individual cameras reveal people drinking, chowing down and moving around as they watch, as though they were catching a movie on Netflix. Focus, people, focus.

Still, the challenge of this elongated halt to in-person performanc­es has spurred artistic invention, as Phillips and his collaborat­ors demonstrat­e. Check into “Zoo Motel” to explore some of those possibilit­ies.

Where:

Cost: Informatio­n:

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 ?? RAFAEL ESTEBAN PHILLIPS ?? Thaddeus Phillips points out the 3D image of a famous Mojave Desert phone booth in ‘Zoo Motel.’
RAFAEL ESTEBAN PHILLIPS Thaddeus Phillips points out the 3D image of a famous Mojave Desert phone booth in ‘Zoo Motel.’

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