The Sewers
 2007 SAN FRANCISCO FRINGE FESTIVAL AUDIENCE REVIEWS
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1 Quandary Place
Abundance
ADVENTURES OF A SUBSTITUTE TEACHER
Barroom Philosophers
Border Crossings

The Children's Museum

Class Notes
Embarrassment & Death
The Falls of Vincent Millay
Found and Lost: Goals for 2002
Frisco Fred's Cabaret!
Fuck You Cancer
Great Hymn of Thanksgiving / Conversation Storm
The Hasheesh Eater
Heavy Metal Playground
HER KIND: The Life & Poetry of Anne Sexton
i hate my friends
Jesus Rant
Kiss My Booth
Korean Badass
Low Hanging Fruit
Monkey Poet Stand-Up!
Organic Boxed Chicken Stock
parts is parts:
Party of One
RM3
The Sewers
Shopping as a Spiritual Path
Spotless
Stetson Manifesto
A Strange Black Passion
Super Glossy!
TeleMongol
Terrible Voice
Tesla's White Pigeon
Turn of the Screw
You Go First

 

Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Marcus Sternski
2 Stars
This show is a lot of fun to look at, and the visuals are very imaginative, but that's about it. Even absurdist farces need a story, and the story here (a play within a play) was pretty dumb. There was lots of (heightened) dialogue, most of it lame. I liked the two actors but not the two actresses. The soundtrack, with a couple exceptions, was overdone and distracting.

The dialogue is the big problem. It's not compelling in any way. It doesn't make me pay attention. It weighs down the forward motion of the show. It adds nothing. I think the show might work better by either cutting all the text or by converting the text into some kind of opera.

Right now, the whole thing feels very general.


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: matty p
5 Stars
If Rosencrants & Guildenstern got into bed with Terry Gilliams Brazil & encouraged Juenet's Delicatessen to make a threesome - 9 months later the big bastard baby of that tryst would be The Sewers. Brilliant! Now say Dadda!


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Jean Beatrice
5 Stars
BRAVO!!! One of the best pieces of theatre I've ever seen! Surreal, creepy, hilarious. The cast is top-notch. The set and the way the cast moves around in it is minimal but impactful. YOU CAN'T MISS THIS SHOW!!


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Natalie
3 Stars
I am giving the overall production 3 stars but would give the set design, the sound, lighting and the acting 5+ stars (all incredible) . Brilliant setup with the dreamlike, nightmarish world the audience is brought into in this apocalyptic look at the world after "the leak". I also love the bits of humor that are woven through it. So why three stars? "Sewers" has been described in other reviews "as absurd or surreal". I didn't find this to be the case because so much put into creating a world that we the audience believe. The atmosphere and bleakness of this story is so unique and beautifully done. But once we are brought into the "Sewers" world I felt we were set adrift when all of the setup seemed to promise like any story, conflict high stakes and resolution. Instead it sort of floats to the ground. I also wasn't sure why this group gets their own set stage and longer running time than other Fringe venues. But definitely a highlight of this festival.


Play: the sewers
Reviewer: buzzy
1 Star
crude images and talk of feces, urine, menses/miscarriage, stench, rape, masturbation and sex saturate nearly every moment of this 75 minute play. there are no heros and no one is happy. i don't mean to be criticize, but i do mean to warn playgoers who may be sensitive to incessant depravity. i understand this is the fringe and i love the fringe, but i have my limits and this one was no fun for me.


Reviewer Email: Mr. Walforf

Play: The Sewers
5 Stars
Banana Bag & Bodice, perennial fringe favorites, are back with a show a lot darker and more dangerous than their seminal production of "Sandwich". "The Sewers" is a dank, dripping look at individuals living on an ugly edge of society. It's never clear if they are the last people on Earth or merely trapped within their own "Play Show".

The plot is largely abstract, but there are two basic tracks: one is the three principles, theoretically a man, his wife and her sister (plus the strange and largely silent "servant"?), but the second is a metaversion in which the man is the playwright and the two women are merely cast in his playshow -- to play his wife and her sister.

It's fascinating watch this all evolve (or devolve?) as what is real and what is written merge and mingle. If you're looking for something straightforward and funny, you might be in the wrong place; if you want something provoking and just a little disturbing, go see the Sewers.

As always with BB&B shows, Dave Malloy's soundtrack is phenomenal.


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Lena & Chris
5 Stars
Magnificently surreal, a bad dream from which I didn’t want to awaken, very advanced conceptually, visually stunning, great music, brilliant script… Masterful in every way. One of our 2 favorites this year.


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: beau smith
4 Stars
A dark drama that quickly became weird and interesting when the playwright wrote himself into the play and discussed that he could continue to mystify the crowd or change the plot at his whim... dark and funny, awesome set, great sound effects, lighting and props.


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Ark
5 Stars
This is the real thing, folks. Rearrange your life so you can see this show. Someday these people are going to have PhD theses written about them. (In a good way!!)


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: The Stingy Fringies
4 Stars
A strange, spooky, sad and surprising spectacle that is more complicated than the previous version two years ago. We were wowed by the technical enhancements (so many mini lights! such much set dinginess! a ready-to-wear sonogram!) sometimes to the point of distraction, but more often delight. Fortunately, the sound is mostly the same, which is absolutely beautiful. The Sewers is a nightmare one-room otherworld and the thought of anyone wanting to write themselves into it is just absurd.


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Elizabeth
3 Stars
I've been thinking about this performance since I left it which to me indicates a level of performative success, but there were significant failings with this show as well.
The good things are
1. A great imaginative set,and a great use of space. The creators incorporate some wonderful innovative touches that take a black box space, which is tough to work with, from a flat non-dimensional space into something that has sharply defined level of background.forground... wonderful costume design, too. And (I appreciated this the most) a really high lvel of tech. expertise on the part of the actors. I could hear everything. There were no swallowed syllables, no sentances that didn't begin and end (I know this might seem like slim praise, but it isn't. I can't tell you how many performances I've say through where actors tongues seem to have become numb halfway through the performance..or the end of the sentence suddenly just drops off the register)Good crisp, clean performance, good decision making overall, and a level of certitude and commitment that truely rocked.
What didnt work for me was the content of this wonderfully defined form, and I'm loath to say it's because I didn't get it- the content was disjoint and did not appear to achieve some inner relationship with itself. The play/performance didn't send out a clear communication to me- this is different than saying there was no plot...it's saying that the potent images of gestation, filth, and birthing(to name just a few images) did not combine with the words to create/carry any unified meaning.


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: fringe go-er
3 Stars
One weird play. Performers were good but...


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Bob Hayden
3 Stars
Well, you either like absurd or you don't. If you do, you will give this show the full 5 Stars. The Sewers satisfied my cravings for absurd for at least the next six months.

It has great acting and fine directing. Then there was the plot, which may have been playing at another venue, although references to a leak and babies kept surfacing. The dialogue moved rather like a pinball from "Howl" to Groucho Marx to the narration in a 1940’s film noir. The stage business is incomprehensible, but well mirrored in the sound, which varies from Glen Miller to random cacophony. Oh, did I mention the waltzing orderly who carries a battered bedpan as if it were a newborn infant?


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Billy Ray Virus
5 Stars
I love Banana Bag and Bodice, and I've seen many of their shows. This was by far the most depressing, unpleasant and horrific play that that they've done. "Gulag HAHA" was hilarious compared to this. If you like your entertainment to be psychotically, unrelentingly, claustrophobically depressing, then you'll love this. It's the theatrical analogue to listening to Joy division on an overdose of bad acid. It's brilliant, in its horror. I would write more, but I am too depressed just thinking about it.


Play: Sewer
Reviewer: Brett
3 Stars
Very dark. Reminded me a lot of David Lynch's "Eraserhead". More a long the line of a thinking person's satire than an outright farce (duh). Kind of hard to follow at times.


Play: the sewers
Reviewer: Kevin Rolston
5 Stars
banana bag and bodice is doing some of the most riveting absurdist work in american theatre today. what's overwhelmingly 'cathartic-haha' about this experience is how the production shifts from ridiculously funny to heartbreakingly sad with a simple exhalation. watching these people on stage is just about the only thing that makes me nostalgic for New York. soundtrack? please?


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Holly Up On Poppy
4 Stars
Visually stimulating and audially captivating, Banana Bag and Bodice live up to the awesome reviews they have received from trusty NYC publications! "The Sewers" is a treat from start to finish - this coming from someone who falls asleep in plays more often than she'd like to admit. These guys had me wide-eyed on the edge of my seat the entire time, if only at points because I didn't really know what was going on and wanted to figure it out. In short - the technical elements of the play are AMAZING, the acting is pretty darn superb, and the threads of the story I managed to gather are great, but the narrative is a little convoluted. But I would see it again.


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Ronald Palmer
5 Stars
Riveting performances by all four actors of Banana Bag & Bodice pulse together a Lacanic trip into an ostensibly semi-autobiographical journey. Hold onto your brains.
Ingenious stage/sound production, sparse and urgent language along with song styling superior to any pop icons imaginable (the hauntingly gorgeous "Why No Baby" is worth the price of admission) make this a must-see performance.
The Sewers conflates metamessage-beyond-4th-wall-narration and absurdist linearity, which jars the viewer/listener back and forth so quickly its akin to a theatrical roller coaster (but funner!). Jason Craig swiftly & aptly yet always surprisingly interrogates his own psychoanalytic intentions as a playwright while simultaneously showing his audience precisely how convincing the plot of this 'play show' can be. The setting of the sewers is one brilliantly designed room that serves as a horrifyingly plausible post-apocalyptic bunker, albiet seemlessly tugged and transformed into a platform for fantasy.
The inevitable apotheosis is your own farce in the mirror. Yes, farce, not face. Believe me: see The Sewers


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Buzz Brooks
3 Stars
Can you say, "KAF -KA"? Yes, folks, they're at it again, let's have another rousing chorus of "Everybody do the Kafka! hey hey hey!" I suppose it's a rite of passage for small theater groups to throw their collective hat in the ring with yet another surreal-absurd clone of good ol' Frankie's wonderful work.
In a post-apocalyptic world reminiscent of either a)a sewer in New York or b)a flooded-out ward in New Orleans, an isolated group tries to manage what's left of their humanity by crafting a play of sorts. They've distanced themselves so far from reality that they ultimately can't avoid alienating one another, and, (while the acting and sound track was quite good,) possibly alienating the audience as well! Watch out, this one runs 75 minutes.


Play: The Sewers
Reviewer: Bob Hayden

I wish I could tell you how much I enjoyed this show. Unfortunately, I could not find the venue until after curtain time. The on-line map I consulted showed The Garage at 6th and Howard. No, it is about 1/3 block east of Sixth on the south side of Howard. You do not see that it is a theater until you are standing right in front of it. Not having my Fringe program, I, like the young woman who was holding an advance ticket, missed the show.

With an adaptation by Jeffrey Hatcher, one of the bet script/playwrights around, and a show by Banana, Bag & Bodice, The Garage may have the prize quality program of the festival. But for God’s sake, take your program and get there early enough to find the place.

I arrived at 6th & Howard about 6:40, and could have waited another 1 1/2 hours to see The Sewers, but the neighborhood offers such a vast array of diversions I returned home.