Don’t call this ‘victim theater’
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Suzie Harrison
She’s been called “A spellbinding performer,” by the Village Voice,
and has received rave reviews across the country. Starting tonight,
after a five-year hiatus from the stage, Aimee Greenberg will be
premiering her newest work “Dona Sangre,” a solo theatrical and
multimedia performance, at BC Space, 235 Forest Ave.
The former Laguna Beach resident prefers not to be called a
performance artist.
“I have issues with the term ‘performance artist,’” Greenberg
said. “It started as an extension of painting and sculpture; the word
became an extra limb that grew out of the need to express beyond the
visual by using the body and voice.
“What has happened over the years -- it’s become the forum for the
soapbox, social theater and social issues,” Greenberg said.
Greenberg said there is a place for that; it’s important, but does
not describe her.
“I was trained in theater at the New York Conservatory for the
Arts,” Greenberg said. “I learned the classics and modern, and then I
developed my own work, more toward experimental, avant-garde or
alternative. But I have the foundation in theater.”
Wynn Handman has been her most influential teacher. Handman, a
protege of Sanford Meisner, co-founded and has been the artistic
director of the American Place Theatre in New York for more than 40
years.
“He told me something I never forgot -- ‘Ballast yourself in
reality, then take off,’” Greenberg said. “It always makes sense to
me. I took off and completely deconstructed the typical three-act
form in theater and created a visual, visceral, expressionistic
theater.”
Greenberg’s objection to much of performance art is that
practitioners aren’t trained in performing and developing a
character.
“They get up and talk about their issues. I call it ‘Victim
Theatre,’” Greenberg said. “I’m getting tired of it; it feels very
Hollywood to me. It’s become more important who you are than the
story you’re telling.”
She used “Dona Sangre” as an example to illustrate her point.
“I am doing a piece about Latin themes, sing traditional Spanish
songs in it and speak a little Spanish in it,” Greenberg said. “But
I’m not Spanish -- I’m a white Jewish girl from New York.”
Instead, Greenberg prefers to call herself a hybrid theatrical
merged-media performance artist, explaining that she is not doing
traditional theater or pure performance art.
“After doing the whole New York thing, off Broadway and off-off
Broadway, TV and film, I left New York and went to Seattle,”
Greenberg said.
Greenberg said she really wanted to be in a small theater
community and was all about doing theater.
“I did a lot of work in Seattle, was an artist-in-residence and
traveled all over the state,” she said. “I started to do some
interesting work -- my own work started there.”
Her first original works “The Cosmic Accident,” “I Like to Watch,”
and “Carne Vale” were conceptualized and performed there.
Her work has also been influenced by her time in Japan on an Asian
Cultural Council Fellowship. She studied and performed Noh, Butoh and
Kabuki and will use masks in Dona Sangre. Greenberg has also
performed nationally and in Europe and Russia. After being diagnosed
with breast cancer, her life changed, but still she relied on the
arts to heal. She wrote a book, “Changing the Face of Breast Cancer.”
“It teaches how to use expressive arts therapy toward healing,”
Greenberg said. “It’s a healing modality and technique I used at
South Coast Medical Center. I call it the handbook for mental health
and expressive arts practitioners and therapists. I’m also a
registered drama therapist.”
She has used her arts recovery program in many states, helping a
cross-section of the population from battered women to the homeless,
teens and survivors of the infamous Los Angeles riots.
“In ‘90, I moved to LA and started my own theater company called
HEIJERA productions, an Indian term meaning for the road,” Greenberg
said.
Her productions, “Dreams of Flight,” “No Codes,” “Phases of the
Loon” and “Dark Moon Lilith,” have been critically acclaimed.
Greenberg’s last performance, in 2000, “Through the Water Lily,”
was an exploration of relationships -- and her husband Tom Call was
part of the performance.
“Life got in the way, so I took a break,” Greenberg said.
She focused on her family, including two daughters, Lily, 7, and
Avalon, 4, as well as writing and other projects.
“‘Dona Sangre’ is based on a novel with a working title. I started
writing the book and started the process a few years ago,” Greenberg
said. “The idea germinated in Mexico. I realized I wanted to perform
again and transformed the basic seeds of the story into a
performance.”
It was an interesting process, distilling the work from the
literary to the visual and physical.
“It’s literary and very poetic, an epic poem set in 20th century
Baja,” Greenberg said.
“Dona Sangre” is partly a play on race and culture with a twist.
Laguna Art Museum’s chief curator, Tyler Stallings, presented two
world premiere performances of Greenberg’s work in 1997 and 1999 at Huntington Beach Art Center, his previous employer. Stallings
described Greenberg as one of the most cutting-edge performance
artists in the area.
“The commitment she has to her vision is truly admirable,
especially in today’s cultural climate,” Stallings said. “She has a
unique vision for exploring the role of women in society that reaches
back to ancient mythology and then swings forward to the present.”
“Dona Sangre” will be performed at 8 tonight, Saturday and again
on May 20 and 21 at BC Space, 235 Forest Ave, second floor. Tickets
are $20. For information or tickets, call (949) 246-1698 or go to
https://www.aimee greenberg.com.
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