Wednesday, September 30, 2015

BAM: 17 Border Crossings by Thaddeus Phillips




From the BAM web site:
A trip around the world via storytelling at its most effortlessly fluent, 17 Border Crossings starts with a man at a desk on an empty stage and ends up everywhere but. The itinerary: a worse-for-wear Communist-era train traveling from Prague to Belgrade, the wheel well of a transatlantic jet to Heathrow, and 15 other border crossings recreated with magnetic, offhanded charm by theater director, designer, and raconteur Thaddeus Phillips (Red-Eye to Havre de Grace). A chair, table, and bar of lights become the imagined settings for invasive body searches at Charles de Gaulle, ayahuasca experiments in the Amazon, KFC-smuggling in Palestine, and run-ins with Ace of Base on Croatian ferries in this engrossing look at the perplexing ins and outs of our fragile right of passage.
From the review in The Guardian:

This is an elegant piece of storytelling spanning more than 20 years and many borders all over the world. Some of these borders have since disappeared. He tells a story about taking a ferry from Italy to the former Yugoslavia and finding himself stranded in a war zone; another about a train journey in which a mysterious man throws packages from the moving carriage into the apparent wilderness; and gives an explanation of how to order a takeaway in Gaza (apparently, it’s delivered by small boys running through tunnels to circumvent border controls). There are contrasts: passing through tight security to leave Israel, and walking almost unnoticed into Jordan.