
The Assember DilatorAt Performance Space 122
Reviewed by
Mitch Montgomery
October 09, 2009
Holsopple and Caitlin McDonough-Thayer star as the creepy Doctor Assember and his soulful nurse, the developers of and guinea pigs for an experimental serum, the Assember dilator, which causes hallucinations that could be X-ray vision. To say they "star" is not quite accurate, however; they're more in the thrall of lush effects (mostly designed by Holsopple) that soon overtake any semblance of narrative. There isn't much spoken dialogue, but both actors excel in their detached synchronization with prerecorded voiceovers and their precise execution of stylized gestures. McDonough-Thayer demonstrates particularly keen comic timing. Yet it's the constant jittering and pulsing of Sindelar and Holsopple's breathtaking, original atmospherics that burn "The Assember Dilator" into your memory—by way of spots on your retinas and ringing in your ears. Bombarded by naked light bulbs of varying intensities, the actors are often blown out (to use a photography term), leaving iridescent ghosts dancing behind them when the stage goes dark. One especially well-crafted sequence places McDonough-Thayer between two satellite dish–shaped light arrays, where she frantically identifies blinding slide projections as they click-clack through with jarring noise. But for all this sensory stimulation, the most disturbing component of "The Assember Dilator" is terrifyingly simple: a shiver-inducing "tck" sound made by each droplet of the serum landing in the eye. Presented by 31 Down at Performance Space 122, 150 First Ave., NYC. Oct. 8–18. Wed.–Sat., 7:30 p.m.; Fri. and Sat., 10 p.m.; Sun., 5:30 p.m. (212) 352-3101 or www.theatermania.com. |
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