Tue. Nov 12th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

NEW YORK – What do Lady Gaga, Imelda Marcos and F. Scott Fitzgerald have in common?

They’re all the basis for innovative new shows that drop theatergoers in the middle of the action. “Here Lies Love,” with music by David Byrne and Fatboy Slim, transforms the Broadway Theatre into a neon-drenched nightclub, where DJs and dictators become unlikely bedfellows and audience members dance at the foot of the stage. A few blocks over at “The Great Gatsby,” the art-deco ballroom of the Park Central Hotel has been refashioned as Jay Gatsby’s mansion, where patrons can imbibe while Fitzgerald’s 1925 novel unfolds around them. And in “A Gaga Guide to the Lower East Side,” a walking tour goes deliriously off the rails thanks to a disgraced reality TV star.

William Shakespeare's "Macbeth" is a key inspiration for "Sleep No More," which opened at New York's McKittrick Hotel in 2011 and famously features audience members in masks.

Immersive theater is broadly defined as any show “that you’re not in your seat for the entire experience,” says Ron Lasko, who wrote “Gaga Guide.” The experimental genre has existed in New York for decades, with theatrical forebears such as “The Donkey Show” – which transplanted “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” to a 1970s disco club – and “Sleep No More” and “Then She Fell,” which let audiences wander through the stories of “Macbeth” and “Alice in Wonderland,” respectively.

Source link