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CLAY MCLEOD CHAPMAN
Afterthoughts by the Director | volume
of smoke
My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Why are you so far from saving me,
So far from the words of my groaning?
O my God, I cry out by day, but you do not answer,
By night, and am not silent
Psalms 22:1-2
How do we cope with tragedy? How does tragedy become
history? What do we, fallible creatures that we are, do in face of immense,
unexplainable
disaster?
We have in our recent history had much experience
with these questions. I remember vividly walking in Brooklyn on a beautiful,
sunny, cloudless
day in September when the super of my building told me that two jets
had slammed into the World Trade Center, just on the other side of the
Manhattan Bridge, less than a mile away. I remember getting into the
subway, catching the last train into Manhattan before the subways closed
down, going to work as if an epoch changing event wasn't occurring all
around me. I remember never thinking for a moment that I would spend
the rest of the day desperately contacting loved ones, walking miles
all over the city and finally coming home, where a green-black cloud
hung over my neighborhood for what felt like forever and oddly smelling
dust collected on my windowsill.
Tragedy has a power over us almost unequaled by
anything else. It focuses us, forces us to be decisive, and through this
shows our innermost panicked
essence. The central event of this play, the Great Richmond Theater Fire
of 1811, had that effect on the people of this city. Clay McLeod Chapman
takes this event and by representing real people, opinions, and events
from the time creates a mosaic of tragedy. By weaving together over twenty
four individual voices, each giving its own little snapshot of the fire,
what emerges is a poetic and powerful accounting of human response to
disaster.
Clay brought me this script in August 2004, and
I leapt at the chance to be involved. Here was a play that, though its
focus is on an event
so far in the past as to be abstract, had real and concrete things to
say
about our condition in America today. Here was Richmond's own Spoon
River Anthology, a playground for actors and directors to test their
creative mettle in order to create a compelling, challenging, socially
relevant
piece of theater that speaks to the past, present, and future. And on
top of all of that, it's funny.
Enduring questions survive for the simple fact
that there can be no satisfactory answers to them. Theater at its best
is a process of constantly trying
to ask better questions, over and over again, searching for the unanswerable
and then presenting our questions on stage in as entertaining a way as
possible. With any luck, a production of volume of smoke can
do just that.
—Isaac Butler
Contributor's
notes
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