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Ephemeral: A Spectator’s Review

Universitas Airlangga’s English Nite is back with a story about a disturbed girl and a boy who got disturbed helping her.

Yesterday I went to watch Universitas Airlangga’s English Department Students’ Association’s English Nite play. This time, the performance is titled Ephemeral, and this time it was performed at Balai Budaya Surabaya, which is a great improvement from the Gedung Pertunjukan Cak Durasim which was used for the 6 previous installments of English Nite. Props to the Student Council and the organizers who make this happen.

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Poster of English Nite EDSA Airlangga 2018. taken from English Department Students’ Association Universitas Airlangga’s LINE account.

I know, the last time I wrote this kind of review I said that it was the last time I’d had an opportunity to watch an English Nite play. To put things briefly, there had been a change of plans. Next year, though, would be different as I have to work and/or study way out of town. So most probably this would be my last review.

Here goes:

Ephemeral features the tale of a girl named Elizabeth, who is distraught by the murder of both her parents. In order to cope with her loss, as well as constant bullying by her schoolmates, she created a host of friends and hang around by them. A childhood friend of Elizabeth, Jason, notices her schizophrenic behavior and tries to talk her out of it.

This sounds a lot like A Beautiful Mind (2001), a movie about the Nobel-winning mathematician John Nash’s battle against his delusions, which also deal with imaginary friends. Well, I don’t know if the scriptwriters drew inspiration from this, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they did.

Let’s jump straight into the ending, though. El confronted her imaginary friends, but in the process she ended up crashing into a vehicle on the street during her hallucinatory bouts. Jason become depressed because he’s unable to save her. However, in the last scene, we are shown that Jason is actually inside a mental institution and has been repeating his story about El and his inability to save her for the past 10 years. So, in fact, the whole play takes place in the mind of a mentally deranged Jason.

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Synopsis sheet handed by the organizers. Scanned by me for this writeup.

For me, the premise of the play is okay, but it’s the execution that leaves the audience dumbfounded. Playing with point-of-view works well in medias like TV and move, but I don’t think it can be done on stage. The directors try to differentiate the scenes happening in real life and those happening in the minds of the characters through lighting. However, this is tricky. Without prior information, this transition is not obvious to the spectators. Moreover, the reveal in the end seems to “cheat” the whole purpose of the play. This kind of approach was also used in English Nite 2015’s play Memento Vivere, and I think it does not seem to work that well either.

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Elizabeth and Jason. (Photo by me)

That being said, the scriptwriters deserve credit for bringing in jokes into the play. There are jokes in dialogues, as well as some practical jokes, which is a welcome surprise. Usually, English Nite viewers are unable to fully understand the story because they can’t hear the dialogue because of technical issues (like the mic not working) or because the play is presented in English. The jokes help to cover this problem. It makes the audience react with laughter, which is good because audience reaction is an integral part of the drama experience.

Overlooking the problems with the story and delivery, the direction itself is excellent. Transitions are handled well with no flaws. There was no error in the technical aspects of the performance, except for the microphones. Moreover, it’s clear that the cast has been very well selected and trained.

The talents themselves are able to carry on with their roles despite the problems, especially the problem with the microphones (this is a constant source of headache for organizers each year, so I feel you ppl). The moods and personalities are visible and distinct scene-by-scene. This is what makes great performances great, and this is why the audience can stick to watching the play despite a rather confusing flow of the story.

The lighting department can carry its work well. Spotlights are used well to create focus on characters, especially during intense scenes. The placement and time are also ably coordinated, with no part missing the cue. Of course the venue does offer some superiority in this part, but the persons in charge are the ones who make it really work.

 

Shots from the play, also taken by me. Again, sorry for the quality.

Sound and music-wise, it continues the commendable track record from the previous two performances (The Verse and Left in 2017). Sound effects fit the atmosphere very well without being overblown. The climactic moments are especially propped up because of the music and sound effects. Again, the choice of venue surely helps, but this won’t work without the work of the sound director and her team. (Totally unbiased, though! 😜)

Speaking in terms of previous performances, Ephemeral seems to carry on the norm of using original scripts in the past three years instead of adaptations. Like I said in the previous recap of five English Nite plays, this is tricky. Often, the scriptwriters use the logic of a screenplay and apply it to a dramatic play. I think it’s worth noting that the experience of watching a play is different from watching a movie, although they’re both done in a theater. Since a play is inferior in terms of visual and audio engagement, dramatic performances often try to distinguish themselves by trying to draw the audience through jokes, breaking the fourth wall, etc. This has been done in other departments’ performances (like Sasindo’s Dramaturgi or Pakarsajen’s Ngangsu Candra Kidung) with great results. I think EDSA can also apply these techniques so audiences get and stay engaged throughout the play.

All in all, Ephemeral was an interesting ride for me. It has its faults, of course, but the overall execution makes up for all that. Surely, I would want to watch such a play again next year had I been given the chance.

Well, that’s my review-slash-rant. I hope I covered everything, but since this is getting so long, I have to skip a few things. For all the cast and crew of Ephemeral, thank you for delivering such an entertaining show and please do tell me if there are things that I got wrong. Afterall, I’m just writing a review no one asked for. Haha.

Bye for now.

 

[This review is also posted on my LINE account: https://timeline.line.me/post/_dUkSgBsamOoZFIDmvspQpZ0gVfNdLjad5QHKcso/1154487277505063035]

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A Spectator’s Tale: Recap of English Nite Universitas Airlangga Performances 2013-2017

This post is originally written on my LINE timeline. I amended some parts due to the error on my part.

Yesterday marks the fifth time I’ve gone to watch EDSA’s English Nite performance. The first time I went to the event back in 2013 was also the first time English Nite got performed outside campus, which was in the Cak Durasim Theater. I’ve been coming to this event every year since. Now I have graduated from the English Department, I still came to the event yesterday all the same. But that time, I felt that I hadn’t done something I ought to have done all those past years.

To tell you the truth, I’ve been meaning to write about this experience every year. Since I’m no longer a student, I think I have to write this now. I might not be able to write this thing in the future for the next performances, anyway. No one’s been doing this thing either. So, if no one is doing it, I have to do it.

Just a heads up: I’ll go into a rant explaining what I see in each performance and what I think of them. I also added a table displaying features of each production, where they all get similar and where they differ.

Okay, let’s roll.

2013: Sitti

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Source: EDSA Airlangga.
  • As the title suggests, this is all about Sitti Nurbaya. Or… is it?
  • You know the drill about that classic tale. A guy named Samsulbahri fell in love with a girl named Sitti Nurbaya, who happened to be betrothed with an elderly merchant called Datuk Maringgih. Being star-crossed lovers and all that, Samsulbahri tries hard to fight his heartbreak and Sitti struggles against her forced marriage to Maringgih, and in the end both lovers die.
  • The play started ordinarily, with Sitti’s parents betrothing their daughter to Maringgih, against Sitti and Samsulbahri’s wishes to remain together. However, in a twist, Maringgih suddenly allows Sitti and Samsulbahri to marry each other. In secret, he offered a condition to Samsulbahri for this to happen. It turns out that the secret condition is that Samsulbahri has to fulfill the desires of Maringgih, who is found to be homosexual. In the end, due to desperation and jealousy, Sitti kills both her husband and the man who takes him away from her. She then kills herself. The end.
  • That was brilliant, wasn’t it? I still think this is the best story among the others.
  • The execution was also amazing, too. All the music scores and songs delivered by the talents are original. Yes, the stage production team composed all the songs and scores by themselves. This was an achievement that no subsequent productions had matched.

2014: Beast

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Source: EDSA Airlangga
  • This was also an adaptation. In fact, we can call it a triple adaptation, since this play was an adaptation of the film Beastly (2011), which is an adaptation of a novel of the same name (published 2007, which in turn is also an adaptation from the French tale The Beauty and the Beast.
  • In this play, though, the story is set in the present time, where the handsome, popular, party animal guy gets cursed by a witch to have a horrendous face. To break free from that curse, the guy must obtain the true love of a girl who can overlook his looks (sorry for the pun). Luckily, the guy with the horrendous look hits up a pretty girl afterwards, after some complications. I couldn’t remember the rest, but in the end the witch gets killed by the girl and the guy’s face returns to normal and the couple returns to a happy relationship. The end.
  • The play was also a musical production, with several characters singing, even though the songs are renditions to existing songs. But, this was still great, and those talents really know how to sing.

2015: Memento Vivere

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Source: EDSA Airlangga
  • Of all the English Nite plays, this was the one I remembered least. Sorry. Maybe it’s because I couldn’t remember the story very well. If you happen to know more than I do, I’ll be very happy to hear from you.
  • If I’m not mistaken, the play deals with inconsistent memories and split personalities, borrowing parts of Christopher Nolan’s (you heard it) Memento (2000).
  • In a departure from the previous two productions, there were no musical performances this time.
  • Again, if I’m not mistaken the story is told from the perspectives of two different girls, which at the end is revealed to be the same person. The only part I remember is the final scene, in which the protagonists shoot some guy. Other than that, I really can’t recall.
  • I think the difficulty with this play is that it tries to adapt something that should belong on the screen (all of Nolan’s works are like this, I think). Plays are basically different from cinemas. Since this play deal with memories and thoughts, I think it needs a whole world of innovation to portray such a play in a theatre. And previous experiences don’t seem to support this creative direction.

2017: The Verse

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Source: EDSA Airlangga
  • This production had to be postponed until 11 March 2017, but when it was performed, the Cak Durasim Theater was in a much better shape.
  • Maybe as a reaction to the previous production, this time the team was determined to present something that can trigger reaction from the audience. They needed a story that the audience can relate to. Originally, the writers intended to put forward an adaptation of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. However, someone in my class year (2013) had an idea of a storyline about a mother’s sacrifice to her son. Again, the goal was to be relatable, so the writers eventually worked on that idea, resulting in a play entitled The Verse.
  • The Verse, the title I mean, is a reference to W.B. Yeats’ poem The Cloths of Heaven.
  • Alan, the only son of the widowed Petunia, aspires to be a musician. He dreams of having a guitar and enjoying a successful career in a band. However, his family, which now only consists of two people, is not very well off. Alan and his mother have a great deal of argument throughout the play. Long story short, he then meets a girl who later becomes his wife. Later, some friend of his gives him a guitar, which enables him to be active in music. As his mother becomes older and sicklier, Alan enjoys a good life with his wife and his rising career. He is confident with all the work that he puts in. Then, his mother died. It is later revealed to Alan that his mother had been keeping a book, in which she makes a checklist of what her son should achieve in his life. In turns out that every good thing that has ever happened to Alan is due to her hard work in communicating with his future wife and buying Alan a guitar and then asking his friend to give it to him.
  • It’s worth mentioning that among the five English Nite productions, The Verse is currently the only one in which nobody is killed.
  • There were one or two songs performed in this play, all renditions from existing songs.

2017: Left

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Source: EDSA Airlangga
  • The second English Nite play in 2017 was performed just yesterday on 11 December 2017.
  • Will, whose mother apparently died from suicide when he was 12, is now living only with his father, Ben. His temperament has changed since his mother’s death, and he frequently suffers from episodes of trauma. During a New Year’s Eve party in his campus, he gets to one of those episodes and is helped by Jane, the popular girl. Shortly after, the two get tangled in a relationship. Jane’s friends warn her not to hang out with the mysterious and weird guy. One of Jane’s friends bullies Ben and insults his mother. This triggers Will into having an episode. Will kidnaps the guy and ties him. He intends to kill the guy for making fun of his mother. Luckily, before Will slices the guy’s throat, he is again visited by his mother’s ghost, who reveals that her death is actually not from suicide. Will’s friends, who have known him since children, are beginning to worry about their friend, who don’t talk much to them about his condition. Jane begins to suspect on her own that Will’s mother didn’t die from suicide. She suspects that it’s actually Will that killed his mother. Ben knows about this, and invites Jane to a meeting to discuss the truth. When the two meets, Ben reveals that it is him who has murdered his wife. Not wanting the truth to spread, Ben shoots Jane dead. Will suddenly breaks into the scene, and after finding his girlfriend dead, shoots his dad during one of his traumatic episodes: first on his knee, and then on his chest. Will’s friends, who are worried about their friend not showing up for their appointment together, finds him on the scene. Still in his episode, Will tries to kill his friends before killing himself. Now crying over their dead friend, they don’t realize that Ben is still alive and is rising to get to them. The end.
  • Wew. This play was intense. But what’s making it even more intense is the lights and sound effects. They really built the tension. Props to those guys working with those.
  • I don’t know about the scriptwriting process, but I suspect that Left is a thinly veiled adaptation of, you guessed it, Shakespeare’s Hamlet. All the ingredients are there: 1) some borderline insane guy gets visited by the ghost of his parent (but it’s the mother who’s dead in this play rather than the father), 2) the main character’s love interest gets sucked into the guy’s dark past and is killed because of it, 3) in the end, all the main characters die (or seem to be), leaving the main guy’s friends to be alive at the scene (for a while, I suppose).
  • Okay, that was just my opinion. Maybe the writer will protest after this.

Now, recapping this recap

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Comparison of themes and devices used in EDSA’s English Nite plays

To end this awfully long rant, I have to say that I couldn’t afford to see these performances, who all had endured long periods of rehearsals, preparations, and sacrifices, just end up as mere one-time entertainment pieces.

Theater performances are art works, and the worst thing to happen to art is for it to be forgotten. All art that is forgotten is useless. Therefore, I just want to say that all this English Nite thing is not useless, after all.

Is anyone still there?

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