SCENE: The red tent of a
fortuneteller
The
red tent of a fortune teller appears “without warning or fanfare”. What seems
to be a fortuneteller is seated at a table, cards, a globe – but wait, it is a
snow globe!
A
Boy (Later we will be introduced to him as William Dugan. See his story in the footnote.[1])
shifts from foot to foot, looking at the fortune teller.
Finally
she takes his hand. This is echoed by
duets of the same movements by rest of ensemble. Dances of handtaking, receiving, giving. What does it mean to take a stranger’s hand?
What can we read in that gesture? There
is something so ridiculously hopeful about believing that a stranger could tell
you the truth about the future, while all the time so closely aware to how much
we are being scammed by this. After the
dance/as the dance/ the following short exchange between the boy and the
fortuneteller.
FORTUNETELLER: She lives.
(BOY): But how will I find her?
FORTUNETELLER: The elephant will
lead you to her.
(BOY): But there is not a single
elephant in sight!
FORTUNETELLER: (It is as if these words irritate the
Fortuneteller. She packs up her stuff,
the tent becomes her giant coat. She
increases in size) If you haven’t already noticed, things are often not
what they seem.
(The
fortuneteller disappears, as do all the double duets. Perhaps as a reverse of the Mother in the
Nutcracker, all the dancers get enveloped in her giant skirt/ which was once
the tent of a fortuneteller)
Shadows
of elephant feet go marching by. The
(boy) watches. “Workers” with long poles
begin to turn the round platform.
Throughout the piece we will see the labor of how things unfold. As in certain kinds of puppetry, where the
puppeters are dressed in black, but still visible, as the action is manipulated
by them.
[1] William Dugan (“Dugie”) was born at the
turn of the century in Moultrie, GA. At
the age of 12 he ran away “to join the circus”.
Not an uncommon pursuit at the time.
He joined the Sparks circus and was put to work with the elephants. He dreamed of one day having his own
circus. Something terrible happened with
the Sparks Circus in Erwin, TN involving an elephant named Big Mary. Dugie returned to Moultrie and saved to put
his own circus together. He purchased
the “Pan American Animal Exhibit” – which included a recently acquisition of a
baby elephant named Nancy. Nancy and
Dugie were inseperable – people tell of seeing the elephant and Dugie on their
daily walks in downtown Moultrie, GA.
Before Dugie could launch his circus he took sick and was
hospitalized. Nancy would walk to the
hospital everyday and stand outside his window.
When Dugie succumbed to his illness and died, Nancy slipped into a deep
depression and soon passed as well.
Dugie’s family wanted a fitting
memorial for their circus-wandering uncle.
They sold the Pan American Animal Exhibit, and with the money
commissioned a statue of Nancy, made of Georgia marble, to mark Dugie’s
grave. You can see this 5 foot by 7 foot
statue at the Primitive Baptist Cemetry in Moultrie to this day. It is said to be the only elephant marker
anywhere in the world.
5 comments:
giving/taking of the hand. . . yes, always aware of the scam, but the seeker gives into/acknowledges why they are at the fortune teller's. he/she WANTS to engage. In the same way, the audience goes to a show to be transported by our imagination to another world/place/event.
Check out this video. Start about 1:00 minute in. What if the fortune teller rises and her costume grows as she does?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKDnWuCw_2g
This might mean the tent disappears and then we have something around the gallery that pulls the audience focus AWAY from center to the outside world?
maybe the fortune teller rises into the grid and her costume is the same fabric as the tent. The costume becomes the new tent and the other tent disappears. still like the elephant foot idea a lot.
ahh the "scam" hadn't directly made that connection. yes. like the connection between the audience's "contract" when they enter a theatre.
yes yes! i am still very attached to the elephant foot idea, too.
Love the video! Wow. if we could do something like that!!!! Many years ago we made an actress "grow" by using human leverage. It was a production of the Scottish play. The witch who grew would stand in her long long skirt next to a platform, under which one of the actors was hiding. Hidden by her skirts, he crawled underneath her costume, and she sat on his shoulders, then he stood up and she rose into the air, her costume extending all the way to the floor.
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