E-Pledge-O-Meter   (1:36 PM - 4/6/04)
 -------------------------------------------
|XXXXXXXXXX|XXXXX-----|----------|----------|
 -------------------------------------------
  
 
Ordinarily I would not post a review from a play and
some people are saying, What's the Minnesota Political
Connection?".  With Governor Pawlenty pushing the
death penalty, to cover up the mistakes of his
Department of Corrections, I believe that this
powerful play is both timely and urgently needed.

Wonder if I can get two tickets for the Governor?

Dan Dobson
Saint Paul
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

======================================================
Flirting With Death 
 
The Exonerated - at the State Theatre - through April
11 - 612.673.0404
 
How an unlikely date led to the writing of 'The
Exonerated'

by Dylan Hicks

Savvy courters know that the romantic prospect with a
future is the one who seems unusually curious,
easygoing, and pliable. Often this means the potential
paramour will cheerfully participate in potentially
boring or unsavory activities such as street-rod
expos, fox-trot lessons, and, apparently, conferences
on capital punishment. Jessica Blank and Eric Jensen
had been dating for a month when they attended a forum
on the death penalty held at Columbia University. It
wasn't something that Jensen particularly wanted to
do--according to Blank, he was "dragged"--but a date
is a date. 

In the end, both conferees were deeply affected by the
event, especially by live-via-telephone testimony from
a death-row inmate. From that experience, Jensen and
Blank, both actors with no playwriting experience,
began work on The Exonerated, which will bring Brian
Dennehy and Lynn Redgrave to the State Theatre this
week. The finished show is a theatrical documentary
based on interviews with wrongly accused people who
were once scheduled for execution. After securing a
theater for three nights in November--which meant they
really had to turn their idea into a play--Jensen and
Blank spent much of their Y2K summer driving around
the country doing interviews with 20 exonerated
death-row inmates. 

"Our relationship was founded on the exonerated," says
Blank. "We actually got engaged while we were on the
road. Meeting these people and hearing their stories
transformed both of us completely." After the
interviews were done, producer-actor-director Bob
Balaban, who had earlier directed Jensen, took an
interest in the project and got Tim Robbins and Susan
Sarandon to perform in the show's November premiere.
Since then, the play has toured the country, and its
rotating cast has included Richard Dreyfus and Mia
Farrow. 

Six of Jensen and Blank's 2000 interviews, plus court
transcripts and case files, provide the raw material
for the simply staged production. Six actors, who
generally remain seated, depict the wrongfully
accused, while four swing actors play cops, lawyers,
and spouses. One of the show's subjects is Tyler,
Texas, native Kerry Max Cook, who spent 22 years on
death row. In 1977, he was arrested for the rape and
murder of a young woman he'd had an assignation with,
three months before the crime. Although much evidence
pointed to the victim's married boyfriend as the prime
suspect, Cook was convicted and sentenced to death.
Cook, who is straight, had worked in a gay bar, which
led the prosecution to paint him as a "murderous
homosexual." In prison he was gang-raped and had a
degrading message carved into his backside. Also
during Cook's time on death row--in 1999 he was
cleared by DNA evidence--his brother was murdered in a
bar fight.

Stories like this, which suggest the Book of Job
updated by Kafka, are already the stuff of high drama
and tragedy. For their retelling, the show's creators
have tried to be as transparent as possible. "We
realized that it was our job as playwrights to get the
hell out of the way, and not to start preaching," says
Blank. "It's a documentary theater piece, so once the
actors start emoting, it's over. It's about simple
storytelling, but a lot of work goes into that simple
storytelling, which in hands of good actors, becomes
invisible." 

The Exonerated - at the State Theatre - through April
11 - 612.673.0404


__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Small Business $15K Web Design Giveaway 
http://promotions.yahoo.com/design_giveaway/
_____________________________________________
NEW ADDRESS FOR LIST:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To subscribe, modify subscription, or get your password - visit:
http://www.mnforum.org/mailman/listinfo/stpaul

Archive Address:
   http://www.mnforum.org/mailman/private/stpaul/

Reply via email to