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New
Ground Theatre has Proof
By Jill Pearson, RIVER CITY READER -- November
27, 2002
David
Auburn’s 2001 drama Proof isn’t a torpid Pulitzer
winner. Though it did win that prize along with the Kesselring
and Tony awards, Proof is suspenseful from start to
finish and has often been compared to a detective novel.
Filled with mathematics, plot twists, character revelations,
and a conversation with a person who doesn’t exist
(anymore), Proof might also remind some audience
members of the Academy Award-winning A Beautiful Mind.
But the play actually has a fresher, more exciting way of
unfolding the mysteries that lie within the plot. So it’s no
surprise New Ground Theatre chose the unique and thrilling
drama to open the winter theatre season this weekend at
Rivermont Collegiate.
New Ground director and founder Chris Jansen has recently
staged other contemporary Pulitzer winners in the Quad Cities,
including Dinner with Friends and Spinning into
Butter. So, naturally, when she heard Proof had won
both a Tony and a Pulitzer, her interest was piqued.
“I began reading it, and I couldn’t put it down,” she
said. “I knew it was a play that needed to be done.”
Actually staging Proof proved to be the biggest
challenge, with a set design that called for a very realistic
house and porch to match the realistic script. Jansen enlisted
the help of her former classmate, Kim Abey, who has worked as
master scenic artist at Yale. After driving up from New
Mexico, Abey helped Jansen construct the entire set in only 10
days.
And interest in the play appears to be strong. At least a week
before the show opened, people had reserved tickets for Proof
– which Jansen says is unusual. She thinks more people,
especially college students, have heard of the
Pulitzer-winning play and are looking forward to seeing it.
“One of the things that makes Proof different from
other work we’ve done is its focus on younger characters,”
Jansen said. (Most of the characters are in their 20s.) “As
far as New Ground goes, one of our missions is to draw a
younger audience. … This play doesn’t set out to please
any one specific age group – it really can be enjoyed by
anyone.”
Proof is the story of Catherine, a 25-year-old whose
brilliant (but supposedly insane) mathematician father,
Robert, has passed away, leaving her with an empty house and
an empty life. Catherine must also deal with her father’s
former student, Hal, who hopes to discover something brilliant
in Robert’s old notebooks; and her sister, Claire, who tries
to move Catherine out of the house and to New York. When
Catherine reveals to the two a groundbreaking mathematic proof
in one of the notebooks, she is faced with questions: Is she
insane too? Will she ever be as brilliant as her father was?
Proof leaves questions not only for its characters, but
for audiences as well. Are most geniuses insane, because
they’re thinking on a higher level? Who defines madness, or
brilliance? The script also touches on the subjects of work,
happiness, family obligation, relationships, fulfillment, and
the importance of knowledge.
At the heart of the script, according to Jansen, is the play
on words: “The proof. The fact that Hal doesn’t believe
Catherine at first. The play’s about giving someone a second
chance, and the disappointments that accompany the fact
someone doesn’t believe you or believe in you. For a
relationship to continue, someone has to believe in you.”
And audiences have been believing in New Ground Theatre.
Jansen said she’s been pleasantly surprised with so many
positive responses to the contemporary scripts New Ground
performs. “No one has complained. Maybe people underestimate
the Midwest. People are interested in what we’re doing.”
Proof will be performed at Rivermont Collegiate on November
29 and 30 and December 5, 6, and 7 at 7:30 p.m. Matinees will
be held at 2 p.m. on December 1, 7, and 8. (The November 29
performance will include a reception after the show.) Adult
tickets are $12. For tickets or more information, call
326-7529.
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