We Love Arts: Courage

The cast of "Courage," a dog and pony dc production. Photo credit: C. Stanley Photography

The cast of "Courage," a dog & pony dc production. Photo credit: C. Stanley Photography

Entering the Capitol Hill Arts Workshop black box theater for a performance of Courage: A Political Theatre Revival is a bit like crashing your neighbor’s weekend-long house party. The place is a mess, you don’t know anyone, but everyone seems to be having crazy fun so you jump right in, why not? If you aren’t the sort who likes the fourth wall being broken repeatedly as actors address you directly and encourage you to participate, this isn’t the production for you. But if you love party-crashing, you’ll get along.

Maybe you shouldn’t trust my opinion, after all, I was handed a beer shortly upon arrival. It’s a new strategy, getting your reviewer tipsy, but everyone else was doing it too (so yes, I caved to peer pressure). In addition to free beer, you’ll be recruited into the army with a hilarious questionnaire. This raucous atmosphere before the show even begins puts you both at ease and on edge at the same time – the perfect mood for a work that’s actually based on Bertolt Brecht’s classic anti-war play Mother Courage and Her Children.

This production by dog & pony dc uses the very colloquial David Hare version as a starting point, accented by a live band with original music by John Milosich and directed (or rather, “radically re-imagined”) by Rachel Grossman, who describes the action as “NASCAR punk political theatre mosh-pit.” Apt. It closes June 26, so race on over – performances are Wednesday through Saturday at 7:30pm.

Now that you’re prepared for the preamble, what about the production itself?

Betsy Rosen, Augie Praley and Wyckham Avery in "Courage." Photo credit: C Stanley Photography.

Eleven scenes and songs pull you through the experience of Courage, a wartime profiteer with three doomed children (this isn’t a spoiler, in true Brechtian style you’re told at the beginning when in the play they will die). Making a living out of war, Courage (played with fierce determination and damn fine pipes by Wyckham Avery) struggles to keep her children from being heroes and her precious cart of goods from being lost. From rugged Eilif who relishes the soldier’s life, to decent but dumb Swiss Cheese, to mute yet eloquent Kattrin – each one is challenged by war’s dilemnas and each one will be lost. Mitch Mattson, Jacob Yeh and Betsy Rosen perform these roles with the strong conviction necessary to make us care about their fates, and to feel culpable when Courage asks us, “why didn’t you help?”

Throughout the play, characters debate the culpability question without engaging in too much overt headbanging – Augie Praley as the Cook, the pragmatic survivor, Colin Hovde as the Chaplain, woefully in love, and Jessica Lefkow as Yvette, the prostitute veering comically from despair to hope. There’s not much of a plot per se – like in life, the characters face choices in situations with little choice left. We’re pulled along this journey by the ensemble, never letting us forget the play’s inevitable outcome or allowing us to veer too much into maudlin sympathy. That’s the Brechtian way and it works very well here, as actors constantly check in, reminding us what scene it is and who’s set to die when.

I’ve been to several productions at CHAW and always bemoan the cramped quarters of the black box – but the production design here is a revelation, using every bit of available space to create what’s in essence a junkyard. The decision by director Rachel Grossman to set the action in the round and the brilliantly chaotic design by Colin K. Bills releases the space like a sigh of joy for me – finally. It really works to have the audience and the actors so intermingled in action with this particular piece.

The music, a sort of East European punk rock hybrid, is a real stand-out, bringing the audience to their feet several times and weaving that revival tent atmosphere into something a bit hypnotic. At times I felt I wasn’t so much watching a theater performance as experiencing the character’s emotions. Maybe that was the beer. But these are hard questions being tackled in the midst of chaotic fun – what’s your personal responsibility in times of war? is it better to be a coward and live or to be brave and die? would you be able to deny your own child in order to survive?

No one knows how they would answer these questions truthfully until they live through those moments. Courage holds up that mirror and asks you to step through it, shattering the illusion of safety an audience normally feels. It shares that concept with Woolly Mammoth’s production of Full Circle last year, which took its cue from Brecht’s Caucasian Chalk Circle. dog & pony dc shows that the same bold vision can be achieved with significantly less money. There’s a hell of a lot of heart and hardly any pretension in this production – go join in tackling the hard questions, beer in hand.

Courage: A Political Theatre Revival
dog and pony dc
at Capitol Hill Arts Workshop
545 7th Street, SE
Washington, DC 20003
Tickets $15
online or $20 at door

As one of the founding editors of We Love DC, Jenn’s passions are theater and cocktails. After two decades in the city, she’s loved every quirky, mundane, elegant, rude minute of her DC life. A proud advocate for DC’s talented drinks scene, she’s judged the Corcoran Gallery of Art’s ARTINI contest, the DC Rickey Month contest, the Jefferson Hotel’s Quill Cocktail competition, and is a founding member of LUPEC DC. A graduate of Catholic University’s drama program, she toured the country as a member of National Players, and has been both an actor and a costume designer before jumping the aisle to theater criticism. Writing for We Love DC restored her happiness after a life-threatening illness, and she’s grateful to you, dear readers. Send your suggestions to jenn (at) welovedc (dot) com and follow her on Twitter.

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3 thoughts on “We Love Arts: Courage

  1. Nice, I’d been mulling over catching this production and now I think I will. Haven’t seen any Brecht in a while. Little disappointed they didn’t employ a more Kurt Weill-esque musical score, but I guess this is a loose adaptation after all. And who can argue with beer!

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