Eat the Document is a thrilling new music-theater work by John Glover and Kelley Rourke, developed with and directed by Kristin Marting, and presented by Amanda+James and AOP.
Concert preview of the work-in-development
Based on a bold and moving novel about a fugitive radical from the 1970s who has lived in hiding for twenty-five years, Eat the Document is a story of activism, sacrifice, and the cost of living a secret.
“It is easy for a life to become unblessed. Mary, in particular, understood this. Her mistakes – and they were legion – were not lost on her. She knew all about the undoing of a life…”
— Eat the Document
EAT THE DOCUMENT
COMPOSED BY JOHN GLOVER
LIBRETTO BY KELLEY ROURKE
BASED ON THE NOVEL BY DANA SPIOTTA
DEVELOPED WITH AND DIRECTED BY KRISTIN MARTING
MUSIC DIRECTION BY MILA HENRY
CAST
JUSTINE ARONSON, CATHERINE BROOKMAN, CHRISTIAN MARK GIBBS, TERRANCE JOHNSON
AMY JUSTMAN, TESIA KWARTENG, PAUL PINTO, CALEB ALEXANDER WRIGHT
Mila Henry, piano
Shayna Dunkelman, drums
Running Time: 90 Minutes
Tickets: $20
About the Show:
In the heyday of the seventies underground, Bobby DeSoto and Mary Whittaker – passionate, idealistic, and in love – design a series of radical protests against the Vietnam War. When one action goes wrong, the course of their lives is forever changed. The two must erase their past, forge new identities, and never see one another again.
Now it is the 1990s. Mary lives in the suburbs with her fifteen-year-old son, Jason, who spends hours immersed in the music of his mother’s generation. She has no idea where Bobby is, whether he is alive or dead. A few towns away, an aging hippie called Nash presides over an anarchist bookstore, drawing the disaffected youth of the next generation into a shifting series of “groups” and “collectives.” Miranda, unlike some of her peers, takes Nash seriously, possibly more seriously than he takes himself.
Shifting between the protests in the 1970s and the consequences of those choices in the 1990s, Eat the Document explores the connection between the two eras — their language, technology, music, and activism.
The sound of 'ETD' draws from the voice-driven choral textures of the Beach Boys' 'Smile', the orchestral sweep of Joni Mitchell albums in the 70s, the psychedelic energy of George Clinton’s folk rock band Funkadelic, and alternative rock on 90s college and indie radio stations. All of this melds with singing actors and intricate musical textures invoking radio static and interference produced by close-mic'd acoustic guitar.
Character-driven and brilliant, Eat the Document is an important and revelatory story about the culture and consequence of rebellion, with particular resonance now.
A co-presentation of AOP’s First Chance Works-in-Development series and Amanda+James’ [working titles] series.
[working titles] is a new program by Amanda+ James featuring works in development of opera and music theater. Featuring original projects in various states of development, the series invites audiences to join in as a critical part of the artistic process through preview performances, open working rehearsals and talk-backs. https://amandaplusjames.com/
Eat the Document logo photo : “G.I.’s Against the War in Vietnam, Central Park, NYC,” Bev Grant. Used with permission.