“Theatre has a responsibility to creatively enlighten society to both the beauty and the flaws of the world,” said Ensemble Theatre of Chattanooga's founder Garry Lee Posey who is featured as the Man from the Minister in ETC’s newest production, How We Buried Joseph Stalin, opening at Barking Legs Theatre April 14.
“Since COVID, I have found it increasingly more difficult to remain isolated in a bubble of ignorance with regards to international events of concern," said Mr. Posey. "Theatre, film and the plight of artists in countries like the Ukraine, Belarus and Russia have been the conduit for my understanding of the world that I had seemingly barricaded myself from experiencing.”
ETC’s latest production will be the second time ETC has partnered with California-based translator John J. Hanlon in presenting a world premiere English translation of a foreign playwright. In 2014, Hanlon’s translation for Colonel Pilate by Latvian playwright Aleksey Scherbak was premiered by ETC.
How We Buried Joseph Stalin, like many of ETC’s productions, blurs the line between reality and storytelling, breaking down a fourth wall while simultaneously respecting the convention. “It really is the perfect play for ETC; it has creative storytelling, it’s meta-theatrical and it’s brand new,” said Joel Sanchez-Avantes who is a producing associate with ETC and also featured in the production.
The story revolves around a theatre troupe presenting the first scene of a play, also titled How We Buried Joseph Stalin, to a press corps as a preview of what is to come, since the play has yet to be inished. A representative of the Minister of Culture arrives to implore the troupe to continue on with the presentation because the President has requested it. This request propels the theatre troupe into a cyclone of hysteria and excitement, demise and deceit.
“The play really does show how easy it could be to become a dictator in a power vacuum where there are scores of people looking to one person for direction,” said James Ogden, who is directing his second production with ETC. In How We Buried Joseph Stalin that person is ironically the director and lead actor of the troupe Voldemar Arkadyviech, played by ETC first-timer Alex Walker.
Solomonov’s play is about the troubling plasticity of the human psyche, about its readiness, under certain conditions, to reproduce the most dangerous practices of the totalitarian past, which never disappeared. In fact, as recent events in Russia and elsewhere make clear, that past has seized the present moment and is about to become the future.
In addition to Mr. Posey and Mr. Sanchez-Avantes, Mr. Walker is joined by Christian Smith, Colby Jones, Joseph Watts, Sarah Mixon, Landon Carpenter, and Christopher Wagner. Mr. Ogden will design sets and lights, Mr. Posey is designing costumes and Paige Denton is the property master.
Performances will be Friday and Saturday, April 14-15 at 7:30 p.m. with a matinee at 2:30 p.m. on April 15 as well. They will continue the following weekend, Thursday-Saturday, April 20-22, at 7:30 p.m. Tickets can be purchased by clicking here. All performances will be at Barking Legs Theatre, 1307 Dodds Ave.