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MARCH 2002 EDITOR'S
UPDATE: As It Is In Heaven will make its midwest debut as part of the
2002 Festival of Faith & Writing. It will be performed April 17,
18 and 19 at 8 p.m. with additional performances on April 18 and April
19 at 1:15 p.m.
The Edinburgh Theatre
Festival is the world's largest. A play begins about every five minutes,
from 9 a.m. to 3 a.m., over the span of almost a month. There for the
theatre-lover is everything from the most traditional theatre to strange
and surreal performance art.
So imagine the
thrill for Calvin College theatre professor Stephanie Sandberg (left)
who attended this year's Festival as both a spectator and a participant.
Sandberg
recently returned from almost two weeks in Edinburgh where she not
only took in about 30 shows, but also witnessed and worked on the world
premiere of "As It Is In Heaven," a play on which she collaborated
with playwright Arlene Hutton.
She says the experience
is like no other she's ever had in the theatre world.
"Edinburgh
is huge," she says. "I can't even describe it. Everywhere
you go there's theatre. And it's such an intense experience. It teaches
you more about how to produce theatre than you ever imagined. One of
the things you have to do is sell your own show. So every day I was
out with the rest of the cast and crew handing out flyers on our play,
talking to people, promoting it. And all over Edinburgh this was going
on. It's amazing."
Debuting a play
at Edinburgh can be a daunting experience. Critics from around the
world attend the Festival each year. So do representatives from movie
companies, looking for the plays which could become the next hit movies.
So Sandberg was
pleased that the first reviews of "As It Is In Heaven" were
positive. In fact, "The List," the official guide to the Festival,
gave the play four stars, saying: "All of this drama is superbly
realised by a cast of Broadway veterans expertly gifted in words and
music. Skilfully directed, these performers glide with ease through
a challenging and thought-provoking period piece that less proficient
performers would struggle to do justice to."
"As It Is
In Heaven," which portrays a Kentucky Shaker community in the 1800s,
was written by New York City's Hutton. Sandberg worked with Hutton as
dramaturg and was associate director of the play in Edinburgh. She
says the experience was an eye-opening one.
"As the dramaturg
I did a lot of research, for example," she says. "And I found
it to be a very good experience. A lot of people in theatre don't want
to be a dramaturg; it's too much behind-the-scenes. I found that I really
enjoyed it."
A dramaturg, in
fact, is a true collaborator with the playwright. For her work on "As
It Is In Heaven," Sandberg drew upon years of prior research on
the Shakers. She also used a Calvin Alumni Association grant to travel
to Pleasant Hill, Kentucky, where she spent time at the Shaker Village,
immersing herself in the Village archives to learn more about how the
Shakers thought, worked and, most importantly, worshipped.
Ultimately Sandberg's
work was critical to a story about nine Shaker women who, because of
the visions of an outsider, had to grapple with what it meant to be
God's children and each other's sisters.
Being true to the
Shaker's came out of Sandberg's research and from her and Hutton's own
Christian commitment.
"Both Arlene
and I are Christians," she says, "so this story was a powerful
one for us. The Shakers are so different from other American religions.
They're not fundamentalist. They're separate from the world, but part
of it too with their contributions - - their art, their furniture. Yet
they have these intense religious experiences, like the revivals I went
to as a child. We wanted to treat that seriously and respectfully."
Sandberg notes
that "As It Is In Heaven" finds itself as part of a larger
current trend in theatre. "All of a sudden spiritual subjects are
coming back to the stage," she says. "This play fits into
that movement. We didn't plan it that way, but it's interesting that
that's how it worked out."
After its Edinburgh
run, the play will premiere in New York on September 20. It will have
its midwest debut in April 2002 when Sandberg directs a cast of Calvin
students as part of the Calvin Theatre Company's production. That performance
will be part of the 2002 Festival of Faith and Writing.
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