WILLIAM LEAVITT The Radio 12, 13, 19,
20, 26 & 27 July 2002
LOS ANGELES, June 18,
2002 - Described as "a sound theater presentation", "The Radio,"
written and directed by visual artist William Leavitt, took place
at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions at 8 pm. on July 12, 13,
19, 20, 26 & 27. Admission was $7.00.
A unique hybrid that
combines elements of theater, musique concrete, and installation
art, "The Radio" is based on a script written for three characters
along with a soundtrack, also composed by Leavitt, which arguably
functions as a fourth character. Alternately speaking to each other
and delivering soliloquy, the actors issue dialogue that is nonlinear
and is meant to seem somewhat unsettled. "The Radio" occurs at an
unspecified time around the present - either the immediate future
or the immediate past, but not at the current time.
An urge to connect with
others, despite a seeming indifference, pervades "The Radio." Formally,
the actors themselves are physically disengaged, each separated
from the other on his or her own stage. Central to the work, the
recorded sound suggests a simmering sense of potential action but,
like the conversations, has no apparent beginning or end. Together,
the elements of "The Radio" result in an evocative narrative about
how we relate to each other as individuals and as societies. It
quietly but provocatively raises matters pertaining to private relationships
and public political issues such as capitalism, the fragility of
the environment, isolationism, and secessionist movements. Everything
about "The Radio" skillfully combines a taught sense of urgency
with Zen-like restraint.
"The Radio" features
performances by Marlena Rijin, John Linton, and Linden Waddell.
Approximately 1 hour and 15 minutes long, "The Radio" is a thoughtful
musing on personal/cultural/political/social moments past, present,
and future.
This performance provided
a rare opportunity to see a live presentation by William Leavitt.
The last one in this area took place twelve years ago. Leavitt has
influenced generations of students, and now teaches at Marymont
College, Rancho Palos Verdes. He has also taught at Otis Art Institute
and California Institute of the Arts. Leavitt is a theater artist,
painter, and musician who has performed and exhibited in Los Angeles
since 1975. He wrote and produced his first theater piece, "The
Silk", in 1975. Around 1988 he began working with Joseph Hammer
and Rick Potts on experimental music projects. They collaborated
on the music for "Random Trees", a play that was presented
at the Santa Monica Museum of Art in 1990. Other theatrical works
of his that have had productions or staged readings are "Spectral
Analysis" (1977), "Three Sofas" (1988), and "Nestor
takes Advice" (1996). As a cellist he has performed in several
local groups including Solid Eye, The Subtones, and Provisional
Riviera. He was awarded a grant from the National Endowment for
the Arts for New Genres in 1991 and a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship
in 1998. His installation works and paintings are shown at the Margo
Leavin Gallery in Los Angeles.
Special thanks to Margo
Leavin, The American Composers Forum, and Transparency for support
of this project. Support for Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions
and its programs comes from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual
Arts, California Arts Council, California Community Foundation Arts
Funding Initiative, Getty Grant Program, Thornton S. Glide, Jr.
and Katrina D. Glide Foundation, Los Angeles County Arts Commission,
and the members of Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions.