


Welcome to OpenForum. We love plays that start a good conversation and there are many ways and places to have that conversation! This is your one-stop place to join in on the discussions going on about all the shows at Forum.
We'd love for you to participate by commenting on our blog posts but we'd also love to interact with you via Social Media. Please follow us, friend us, like us, link us, and watch us (not necessarily in that order)
|
|
|
|
|
|
For information on our post-show and stand-alone OpenForum discussions, click here.




In 2010, Tyler Perry's version came out and it was nothing like the beautiful play I heard read. I wanted an opportunity to show people what the play could be. I wanted a chance to bring people back to the beauty of the poetry. I also had an amazing choreographer I wanted to work with.
excited about the fairly radical changes you've brought to it. Can you talk a bit about the re-conception of the story and how that came about?
JJ: The Minneapolis theatre community is so dynamic! There are artists working in every direction of the genre and doing great work. It feels so good to be a part of that community.

By Mad Forest dramaturg, Hannah Hessel (@hanvnah)
From the program for Mad Forest
On the plain where Bucharest now stands there used to be “a large forest crossed by small muddy streams…It could only be crossed on foot and was impenetrable for the foreigner who did not know the paths…The horsemen of the steppe were compelled to go round it, and this difficulty, which irked them so, is shown by the name… Teleorman – Mad Forest.”

by Mad Forest director, Michael Dove (@michaeldove)
(updated, 10/10/2011, 2:37 pm EST)
I'm starting to realize that I've had revolutions on my mind for a really long time, now.
In part, it's our current production of Mad Forest, which takes place in Romanian Revolution 1989. Then there was Monday's (Re)Acts performance where 8 artists created short works in reaction to different revolutions throughout history. On top of that, we've had a few major events cross our news channels over the past year: "Arab Spring," the UK riots, and the Occupy Wall Street protests happening in New York and all over the country.
But going back even further, I'm realizing that the term and concept of "revolution" have been fairly central aspects of my life since before adolescence. I grew up in the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia, where you couldn't walk 10 steps without tripping over a Civil War landmark plaque or battleground. Add to that the fact that my parents choose Williamsburg, Virginia as our twice-a-year vacation spot where your head is constantly filled with tales of the British Colonization and the American Revolution. After that, I'm realizing that it was no coincidence that I've found myself in Washington, DC, surrounded by American History relics inspired by our great war against our oppressors.
So, taking a step back from all of this, I've been asking myself "what does 'revolution' mean, exactly? Are all of these current and historical events related? What part of our human nature causes us to revolt?"
I remember from my Latin class in high school that the word "revolution" is from revolution, "a turn around." It's a distinct and fundamental shift away from a system or an idea. The popular (or even, perhaps, romanticized) notion of a revolution is a populist movement against oppression. Revolution from a destructive tyrant, from a repressive system of social/religious beliefs, or maybe an industrial revolution that changes nearly all aspects of daily life.
Relating this concept to how I view the types of plays I feel are important and the types of stories Forum Theatre is focused on telling, I'm looking at the "what does 'revolution' mean" question in terms of "how we can live together, better." I think, deep down, these events happen when a group of people realize that there HAS to be a better way. A movement that says "We are not being treated the way we feel we should."
With Mad Forest we have a story about the perception of a revolution that leaves everyone asking "what exactly happened? Who really led this movement?" And while many people wanted the change that revolution promised, what came after was a release of pent-up emotions and feels that became a whole new challenge.
As we look to the futures of Egypt, Libya, and the other Arab Spring revolutions, as we look to the legacies of our own American conflicts, the results of the revolutions discussed in our (Re)Acts night, and as we ponder the outcomes of the Occupy Wall Street movement, we have to constantly ask ourselves how these events can be used for good and how can they bring us together as a society that treats its members more fairly.
-----------------------------------------------------------
An Egyptian activist named Mohammed Ezzeldin explained what he saw was the connection between Occupy Wall Street and the protests against Hosni Mubarak.
Updates/conributions:
Our friend Ari Roth (@arirothdc), the Artistic Director at Theater J, send me these two news stories that felt relevant to this conversation:


We want people to talk about Mad Forest. We always want people to talk about our productions. That’s one of the reasons we make the producing choice’s we make. It’s the reason we have the OpenForum discussion series, it’s the reason we have this blog. At Forum, the work doesn’t just happen on the stage, it happens in the audience. We always hope that the work on our stages leaves audiences with questions that they want to ask. Theatre is a questioning art. Since it happens both communally and individually, no theatrical experience is completely shared.
our OpenForum discussions electronic. I want to find a way to have the discussions on the audiences own time. To let them get home, check in on the kids, get a drink, do whatever their routine is and still have the opportunity to check in, to ask their questions and to connect.
|
Subscribe to RSS |