Michael Fox Kennedy
in
Will Eno's
Title and Deed
Saturday, September 16 and
Saturday, September 23
@ 7:30 PM
“We all have a funny little map in our head that divides the world into home and away.” The speaker in Will Eno’s one-character play Title and Deed is a recent arrival on our shores, disoriented from culture shock and homesickness, and he is struggling to illuminate both sides of that map with a torrent of words: absurd, tragic, stinging, hilarious words.
The original New York production of Title and Deed was on “ten best plays” lists for 2012 in both the New York Times and The New Yorker. The Times described it as “a haunting and often fiercely funny meditation on life as a state of permanent exile.” John Lahr in The New Yorker wrote, “Eno’s joking seems to me a great act of courage: a way of facing lostness and learning to live with it. His voice is unique; his play is stage poetry of a high order…. In this tale’s brilliant telling, it is not the narrator who proves unreliable but life itself.”
Now this unusual theater experience comes to the Hooker-Dunham Theater in Brattleboro for two Saturday performances, September 16 and 23 at 7:30. The production, first presented in February by the Apron Theater Company at Next Stage in Putney, features Michael Fox Kennedy as the unnamed exile. Christopher Emily Coutant is director.
Michael and Christopher have worked together in Vermont community theater for a dozen years. They acted in the Apron Theater productions of Other Desert Cities and The Cripple of Inishmaan and at the Actors Theatre Playhouse in Michael Frayn’s Copenhagen. This summer they both appeared at Next Stage in the Apron production of Brecht’s Mother Courage, with Christopher in the title role. In earlier years, Christopher played a prominent part as director and actor at the Brattleboro Center for the Performing Arts, where she played the role of Emily Dickinson in the one-woman show Belle of Amherst. Michael also has prior experience in a one-character drama: he presented his own play, assembled from the words of Abraham Lincoln, at many venues around New England.