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WINDYCITYMEDIAGROUP

THEATER REVIEW We Are Pussy Riot or Everything Is PR
by Karen Topham
2019-06-11


Playwright: Barbara Hammond

At: The Ready, 4536 N. Western, Chicago. Tickets: Website Link Here . Runs through: June 29

In 2012, an anonymous Russian activist/punk rock group named Pussy Riot made headlines around the world by performing a 48-second "punk prayer" called "Virgin Mary, Chase Putin Away!" in Moscow's Church of Christ the Savior. Subsequently, three of the group's members were arrested by Russian authorities, and two of them eventually received two-year prison sentences for "hooliganism motivated by religious hatred." Their story, presented in a quasi-absurdist style, is the subject of Barbara Hammond's We Are Pussy Riot, or Everything Is P.R, now playing at Red Tape Theatre.

This lively and enjoyable production begins in the lobby before the show, as Pussy Riot suddenly appears to perform its guerilla rock as it did in the church. Once we are inside the theatre, things take off from from the arrests of the three band members, Katya, Masha, and Nadya ( played by Stephanie Shum, Jalyn Greene, and Emily Nichelson ). A parallel plot concerns a former history professor named Sergei ( William Rose II ), who is imprisoned at the same time as the Pussy Riot women and protests the lack of movement toward a trial with a hunger strike while the doctor assigned to him ( Zoë DePreta ) does everything she can to keep him alive. We also watch as Putin ( Casey Chapman ) pulls the strings of the church Patriarch ( Joseph Ramski ) and the trial's judge ( Emilie Modaff ), while the defense attorney ( Dionne Addai ) is continually frustrated at this kangaroo court; there is no doubt in this play that the original protest was well-founded. Also appearing are Ann Sonneville in several significant roles including a devout woman who feels that the protest was sacrilegious, Alec Phan as a sympathetic guard, and Nora King as a reporter and Madonna, among others.

Yes, Madonna. Marilyn Monroe also makes an appearance. This play has everything but the kitchen sink ( and it does have a toilet brush and several other household tools ). It is a bit schizophrenic in its structure: at times a very serious portrayal of government overreach and the appalling lack of freedom and due process in Putin's Russia, at other times bordering on absurdism; I mean it features a toilet brush. But everything is kept rolling smoothly by the solid direction of Kate Hendrickson, who certainly had a lot to keep track of in this one in addition to guiding her actors to some fine performances.

If this were 2015, when this play was first performed, it might have been interesting as a reminder of the freedoms that we as Americans take for granted. But this is a different era, and the political winds that have been blowing in the US are frightening enough to make this play into a warning of what can happen in a dictatorship. The more Donald Trump praises Putin and other strongmen who rule their nations with iron fists, the more he "jokes" about extending his term or how much easier it would be to be president for life, the more that his judges and his cronies and his directives chip away at our rights and our freedoms, the closer we are to slipping over the edge. Once this play might have had an "it can't happen here" feeling; that is no longer so. Now it is a reminder that protest is an obligation of the people when their leaders are out of control. Now it is a reminder that if we are not, as members of the band have said, all Pussy Riot, we ought to be.


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