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- THEATER, Page 62Breaking the Jell-O Mold
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- Blue Man Group is, yes, a group of men who are really blue, and
- their bizarre "art playground" is a sensation
-
- By RICHARD ZOGLIN
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- The three bullet-headed, blue-colored actors move about
- the stage in eerie, wordless unison. They bang away at
- kettledrums while squeezing tubes of paint onto the drumheads,
- creating volcanic eruptions of color. They stuff handfuls of
- Cap'n Crunch cereal into their mouths, then join in a symphony
- of amplified chomping. They entice an audience member onstage
- for a banquet of Twinkies; suddenly cream filling spurts out of
- their chests. By the end of the evening, with strobe lights
- flashing and electronic music pulsing, the audience is engulfed
- by a tidal wave of crepe paper streaming from the balcony.
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- Don't try to understand it. Nothing Blue Man Group does
- makes much conventional sense. The troupe's 80-minute theater
- piece, called Tubes, is a potpourri of physical stunts, visual
- gags, art commentary, audience participation and all-out sensory
- assault. In the '60s it might have been called a happening;
- today the preferred term is performance art. Whatever, it is the
- most talked-about off-Broadway show of the season -- and the
- most bracingly original.
-
- Explaining Blue Man Group is no easy task. Take the Blue
- Men themselves. They are expressionless and robotic, yet oddly
- childlike and endlessly creative: a tripartite Buster Keaton,
- dropped in from Saturn. Some of the bits are overtly satirical
- (a dead fish on a canvas is the subject for a high-toned art
- critique, which scrolls by on an electronic message board).
- Others are raucously playful. One of the Blues tosses what
- appears to be marshmallows across the stage to a comrade, who
- catches them with his mouth and stuffs them inside like a huge
- wad of bubble gum. An audience member is hauled up onstage,
- dressed in a white jumpsuit and helmet, and taken backstage,
- where a video camera shows him getting suspended by his feet,
- splashed with blue paint and bounced against a canvas. He
- reappears onstage with his head encased in a mold of orange
- Jell-O. (It's a bit of Blue Man trickery: the fellow manhandled
- backstage is actually a pretaped double. The Jell-O, however,
- is real.)
-
- "We are trying to create an art playground," says Chris
- Wink, one of the three 30-year-old New Yorkers who formed Blue
- Man Group in 1988. Their backgrounds are as unexpected as the
- show. Wink, who used to write synopses of articles for a
- Japanese magazine, dubs himself a "disillusioned futurist." Phil
- Stanton was a drummer and an aspiring actor who met Wink when
- they worked together for a catering company. Matt Goldman, a
- high school friend of Wink's, got an M.B.A. and worked as a
- computer-software producer before joining the group.
-
- They began doing their Blue Man act on the sidewalks of
- New York City, once setting up shop opposite the Copacabana
- nightclub and enticing the overflow crowd to their own
- alternative "Club Nowhere." Later they moved indoors to various
- performance spaces in Manhattan. They created Tubes (named for
- the industrial tubing that snakes along the theater walls, hangs
- from the ceiling and laps up onstage) in early 1991 for the La
- MaMa experimental theater, then restaged it at the Astor Place
- Theater in November.
-
- The group is getting offers to take its blue humor
- overseas (since most of it is wordless, the language barrier is
- minimal). For the time being, though, they have settled in for
- what is shaping up as an extended run. "Up until now, we were
- always building the props and wrapping the wires right up to the
- last minute," says Wink. "This is the first time we've had a
- chance to work on our craft."
-
- It is still a labor-intensive show. The three arrive at
- the theater at noon to help prepare the props for the evening
- show. A fresh Jell-O mold is delivered every day, and 1,500 ft.
- of recycled crepe paper is wound onto rollers for each
- performance. The blue makeup takes nearly two hours to apply;
- the actors do it themselves. Once the show is over, they hang
- around for another couple of hours, helping clean up the nightly
- mess.
-
- The group members wax philosophical about their chosen
- color ("Blue has an emotional complexity: a severe quality, but
- also a softness"); their alienation from the '80s ("We felt
- like outsiders, but we were steeped in the culture"); and their
- desire to "blesh" with the audience (the word, a combination of
- blend and mesh, comes from Theodore Sturgeon's sci-fi novel More
- Than Human). But their show is refreshingly free of
- intellectual cant and artistic pretension. One can hunt for
- precursors -- the populist subversiveness of Penn and Teller;
- the visual inventiveness of Squat Theater -- but the troupe
- seems to have sprung, well, out of the blue. "This is a
- celebration of the act of creation," says Wink. For the
- audience, it's just a celebration.
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