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- THEATRE, Page 81MTV Drama
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- By WILLIAM A. HENRY III
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- UNIDENTIFIED HUMAN REMAINS AND THE TRUE NATURE OF LOVE
- By Brad Fraser
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- The first thing one notices about off-Broadway's newest
- and best play is the audience: instead of the usual middle-agers,
- these spectators are young, hip, the MTV generation. They don't
- go to the theater very often -- a lot of them find it sedate --
- but the thriller they are watching (and laughing at in all the
- right places) might be characterized as MTV drama. It is told in
- montage, in short riffs of scenes and crosscuts and simultaneous
- action instead of symphonic arcs of speechifying. Its characters
- are impeccably dressed, drop-dead cool and not very happy. The
- plot, like a music video, features casual nudity, simulated sex
- and arrestingly etched violence: a man soaked in blood from eye
- sockets to navel, a woman with a knife at her throat.
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- The underlying theme is how much easier these urban young
- find it to couple in the dark than to commit their hearts or
- even voice their feelings. A woman bluntly tells a man trying
- to seduce her that the romantic method won't work. The central
- male, informed that someone loves him, replies that no such
- thing exists. His best friend's mantra: "Everybody lies." To
- underscore the nihilism, playwright Brad Fraser, 32,
- interweaves teen folklore of erotic mayhem, references to AIDS
- and a gradual unveiling of a serial killer -- all with mordant
- humor (a man going to a pickup bar shouts to his female
- roommate, "I have a blind date with destiny!"). A hit in
- Fraser's native Edmonton, Alta., and in Chicago, Human Remains
- is not only stylistically apt and journalistically observant
- about its rock-and-anomie world but also deeply felt and
- thought. It stunningly blends punk popular appeal and poetic
- power.
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