- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To The Dogs & The Dove
- by Djuna Barnes
- Like & Murder Cake
- by Diane di Prima
article in sfgate.com by Apollinaire Scherr
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- Don't Be Absurd!
- Traditionally, absurdist theater has been something of a
boy's club: Ionesco, Beckett, Pinter, Albee.
Perhaps
inundation by the humdrum absurdities of
daily life has
weakened women's appetite for vast existential
questions.
But Christina Augello, the enterprising
director of Exit
Theater and its six-month Absurdist Season,
knew that if
she tweaked the definition of "absurdist"
a bit, she'd find
plenty of women writers in love with the
absurd. In the
second to last offering of the season,
the Exit presents
rarely staged works by the high priestess
of modernism
Djuna Barnes and famed beat poet Diane
di Prima.
- Called the Garbo of Greenwich Village
for her extreme
reclusiveness (neighbor ee cummings would
shout across
the courtyard, "Are you alive over
there, Djuna'"), Barnes is
most celebrated for her tragic 1936 novel,
"Nightwood." But
before "Nightwood" and before
giving up writing completely,
she penned a couple of odd, intriguing
short plays. In "The
Dove" and "To the Dogs,"
it's as if Ibsen took on the voice of
Oscar Wilde -- Barnes depicts the thwarted
lives of her
women with aphoristic wit. Among SF poet
Diane di Prima's
thirty-three books of poetry and prose
are the two surreal
word scores, "Like" and "Murder
Cake," created when
Dante, Emma, Richard Lovelace and Childe
Harold jumped
off her shelves and started to chatter.
Di Prima sat very
quietly, and listened.
Apollinaire Scherr, SF Gate
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