PI ONLINE: 5-23-03

BY LUCIA MAURO

“I think the playwright is the slave to the Art. So the playwright knocks out his or her ego to create universal, long-lasting Art. Then the director needs to be a slave to the playwright. Everything you do as a director needs to come from what the playwright wants. The actors and designers are then slaves to the director. I demand of actors a complete mental and physical commitment to the role. And it always goes back to the playwright.”—Sean Graney, Director/Playwright

How does one glimpse into the mysterious mind of Sean Graney, beyond the distinctly arresting and empathetic productions he’s directed for The Hypocrites? Talk with him about his craft over coffee—and watch him doodle. The visionary director manages to avoid self-congratulatory auteurism.

There’s a randomness and detail to his scribbles—boxes within boxes surrounded by odd calligraphy and razor-edged letters. He can be exacting and spontaneous. All the while, Graney discusses the humane and empowering logic of absurdism particularly apropos as he gears up to direct Samuel Beckett’s Happy Days for The Hypocrites at Stage Left Theatre (May 31-July 6).

“I just love this play, and I love Beckett so much,” Graney, 30, quietly effuses. “Human suffering dealt with a comedic eye struck a chord with me.”

He also was attracted to the depth of experience Hypocrites company member Donna McGough—whom he says is “so emotionally available as an actor”—brings to the role of protagonist Winnie, an idealist slowly consumed by a mound of earth.

“You need to bring that level of experience to Beckett,” Graney continues. “I was in college when I 'acted’ in a production of Krapp’s Last Tape. It was funny, wrenching, terrible. And it was ridiculous. When you’re 21, you don’t know what’s going on. It was odd, as the character looking back at his life, to not have a younger self to judge.”
The “mathematically inclined” director is approaching Happy Days from a profound emotional base—one that is very real and one that painstakingly charts in numbers and degrees how much happiness is covering up the sadness. Tragedy essentially joins hands with a vaudevillian-style of humor.

“It’s hard when you have a play about misery, and the actors don’t have a camaraderie with the audience,” Graney asserts. “It becomes an actor saying your life is miserable, and it’s condescending. As a performer you are part of the audience, part of humanity; you’re saying all our lives are miserable—and there’s a greater truth and compassion in that.”

Beckett—and his absurdist brethren, most notably Eugene Ionesco—speak to Graney in art and life: “I really believe, philosophically, the existentialism of Beckett’s writing. We are all gonna die. We find meaning where we have to find meaning. All we do is grab onto life, and it has meaning to us. Whatever we latch on to is who we are.”

Graney first discovered theatre in his hometown of Saugus, Massachusetts. He grew up in a blue-collar family and enjoyed drawing pictures, an interest that has filtered into his theatre work on many levels, from his set designs to unobtrusively sketching out the visuals of a script on a more metaphoric level. He’s attracted to the notion of giving shape and life to the “blank canvas” of a theatre space. During his junior year at Saugus High School, he got involved with summer theatre and quickly started a theatre club, where they did “bad musicals.”

“It gave me a sense of belonging,” shares Graney with a semi-wry grin. “All the misfits did plays, and I was one of the head misfits.”

He went on to receive a BFA in theatre and writing from Emerson College in Boston. While at Emerson—a school that stressed hands-on experience in the arts and media—Graney decided “to put all my eggs in the basket of absurdism.” He pursued his own personal studies of the absurdists and quickly veered away from “slice of life” theatre. Up until his third year, he had been pursuing acting. But, admitting his problem with authority, he found it tough to deal with directors—and, not surprisingly, later became one himself. He also concentrated on playwriting and won the Rod Parker Playwriting Award during his senior year at Emerson.

Graney soon found himself penning “bad Ionesco knock-offs” and trying to get them produced in Boston—an existentialist struggle in and of itself. In 1995, he moved to Chicago to be a playwright. When he wasn’t working at Starbucks, Graney was holed up in his apartment and leading the life of a tortured writer—a lifestyle he began to reject. So he landed a job as a house manager at Chicago Shakespeare Theater (then Shakespeare Repertory) and got a first-hand understanding of how a theatre company is organized.

By 1997, he started his own troupe, The Hypocrites, a respected, absurdist-rooted company where he has been able to bridge the gap between visible theatrical contrivance and rich emotional truth. Inaugural productions, like Ionesco’s The Bald Soprano and Georg Buchner’s Woyzeck, were minimally staged at the now-closed Café Voltaire. His vision continued to take intriguing shape with itinerant Hypocrites productions: Edmond, The Fire Bugs, Marat/Sade, The Cherry Orchard, Arcadia, Blood Wedding, Rhinoceros, Machinal, and more classic yet rarely produced works.

Graney is one of the few directors capable of putting a personal stamp on his stagings while remaining fanatically devoted to the playwright’s original purpose and the hierarchy of theatrical responsibilities: “I think the playwright is the slave to the Art. So the playwright knocks out his or her ego to create universal, long-lasting Art. Then the director needs to be a slave to the playwright. Everything you do as a director needs to come from what the playwright wants. The actors and designers are then slaves to the director. I demand of actors a complete mental and physical commitment to the role. And it always goes back to the playwright.”

Following the basic tenets of absurdism, Graney is not attracted to works with a specific philosophical viewpoint. And he does not approve of how absurdism has evolved into “just wacky—like Christopher Durang—which I loathe.”

“I like plays that don’t know the answers themselves,” he says. “I like plays that ask questions: What is the meaning of life? How do I live? How should man live? Man in conflict with himself is most interesting to me.”

Graney makes it a point to constantly hone his craft and delve deeper into the possibilities of theatre. An important turning point occurred during his production of Blood Wedding. He notes how his stagings were often criticized for being emotionally bereft.

“And I thought that was my bag,” continues the director. “I attributed most of the problems of theatre to emotional theatre—people pretending they’re sad or angry on stage. That’s what I was calling emotional theatre. I had thought the actors were being dishonest with me.

“But, with Blood Wedding, the play is so heightened emotionally. The people are just speaking this beautiful, bizarre poetry on a heightened level. I kept explaining to the actors how deep I wanted them to go, and they just weren’t going far enough for me. I finally said I’m not explaining why—I would just give them more emotions and say, 'You just have to be the saddest you can possibly be.’ I constantly pushed them.”

Through this process, Graney realized he had swung from an emotionally bereft sensibility to plunging full force into the emotions but found them to be the same thing: “I discovered that I’m not fighting for the emotionally bereft or the emotionally deep. I’ve just been fighting for honesty. I don’t think actors put on masks of characters. I think characters are extensions of actors. It all has to come from your person. If theatre is all fallacy, pretend and illusion, then why should we listen or believe in it or care?”

To bring that honesty of the performance out, Graney believes you have to push the play into a chaotic realm it’s never been in before because “that’s where your true self comes out; you don’t have a mask for those situations.”
In The Hypocrites’ most recent production of Machinal, he more clearly linked both ends of the emotional pendulum: “I tried to make the world cold and distant, and the characters emotionally charged. I asked, 'If the world is like this, what happens to the sensitive person?’ But I’m not saying one is right or wrong; I’m not making any judgments.”
He is particularly anxious to direct Balm in Gilead, which is The Hypocrites’ season opener this fall. “I’m doing it,” says Graney, “because it’s all about the chaos of the environment—people leading their desperate lives. Plus Lanford Wilson writes with a theatricality that often gets ignored. At one point, the actors turn the set around.”
Then he laughs almost diabolically: “I’m excited about orchestrating 34 people. It’s maddening, and I love it!”

Graney also has been gripped by playwriting again. His latest work has been featured in Collaboraction’s “Sketchbook” and Estrogen Fest, and his plays are receiving staged readings at Chicago Dramatists. Heavy-hitting topics include obsession, the death of innocence and the death of a relationship. His psychologically unsettling drama, The 4th Graders Present an Unnamed Love-Suicide, is receiving its world premiere at the Side Studio in Rogers Park through May 31.

He plans to continue to grow The Hypocrites and says he would like the company to have its own space within five years, while dividing his time between directing, writing and set design.

The fundamental appeal of theatre for Graney is that “it’s literally an artist talking to the audience. It seems so pure; it doesn’t need to be filtered through a medium.”

Happy Days directed by Sean Graney opens May 31 at Stage Left Theatre. For more information, call 312/409-5578 or visit www.the-hypocrites.com.

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