Join us for a screening of Reza Abdoh’s extraordinary, site-specific work Father was a Peculiar Man, an adaptation of Dostoyevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov staged in New York City’s Meatpacking District in the summer of 1990. Produced by Anne Hamburger’s En Garde Arts, Father was a Peculiar Man showed how brilliantly Reza applied his specific site-based approach that he developed in Los Angeles to New York City’s urban infrastructure. One of the goals of En Garde Arts’s site-specific journeys through New York’s Meatpacking District was to use the local architecture as a theatrical set while at the same time evoking and playing with the history of the place. The half-deserted cobblestone streets south of Chelsea enhanced the play’s nineteenth-century references. The neighborhood’s past as both a meatpacking and transportation hub via the High Line trains as well as a former center for after-hours sex clubs merge as perfect background for Reza’s spectacular tableaus of gluttony and lust.
Title | Father was a Peculiar Man |
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Year | 1990 |
Genre | |
Country | United States of America |
Studio | |
Cast | Tom Fitzpatrick, Tom Pearl, Juliana Francis, Tony Torn, Ken Roht |
Crew | Mira-Lani Oglesby (Writer), Tony Torn (Editor), Reza Abdoh (Director), Reza Abdoh (Writer), Miestorm (Camera Operator) |
Keyword | theater |
Release | Jul 01, 1990 |
Runtime | 120 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 0.00 / 10 by 0 users |
Popularity | 1 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | English, Español |