by Louis Clata
The New York Times - April 10, 1970
The
world rights to "Stomp!", the multimedia protest musical environment
entertainment, have been acquired by Michael Butler, producer of Hair.
Mr.
Butler plans to present the show, now playing at Joseph Papp's Public theater,
on the West Coast next fall and then bring it to Broadway next season.
"Stomp" is the creation of a group of young, disaffected Southerners
who met and developed the musical at the University of Texas and then came
north with it.
The
producer says that he is contemplating some changes in "Stomp" and
will work on them in conjunction with Douglas Dyer.
The
sale of the world rights to "Stomp" will not affect the show's
commitment to a four month festival tour in Europe under the auspices of the
New York Shakespeare Festival. The tour begins May 21 in Paris, where it
will be presented for nine days as the American entry at the Festival of
Nations.
Copyright
The New York Times Company. All rights reserved
The
Great Speckled Bird Sept 8,1969 vol. 2 #26 pg. 15
Atlanta theater has been dying a painful death for the past
several years. And Atlanta audiences have been suffering from cultural
deprivation. But Michael Howard, director of the Alliance Theater is taking a
step to improve the situation.
On September 6, a group of young people from Austin, Texas, is
giving Atlanta an opportunity to witness what may be part of the rebirth of
theater.
Mixed media-a live rock band, film, song, audience-actor
participationÑis combined with the story of a kind of Everykid in the new and
exciting way of communicating what these young people are trying to say.
"Stomp" is an experiment in communal Theater. Under the
direction of Douglas Dyer, the "Stomp" cast has been living and working
together since the play was first created. Although it uses a tightly
structured plotline, it is also an experiment in breaking down the antiquated
isolationism of the audience and drawing the audience into participation. It is
an experiment in speaking with eyes, hands, mindsÑnot just stage voices. It is
an experiment in which Atlanta audiences must participate in order to
understand.
If this new, relevant, real theater is to survive, people must
open their minds and support it by involving themselves in the experiment and
remembering it.
Opening Saturday, September 6, at 8:30 p.m. Be there and be open.
ÑPam gwin
STOMP!, written and directed by Douglas Dyer, in the
crypt of the Mausoleum for the Arts.
Nothing is so flaccid as an idea whose time has come and gone. The idea for Hair was timely conceived, executed, and fully realized. Stomp! is an almost-frank attempt to exploit the concept of Hair, to resonate to its sounds, and to reproduce the responses to it. Stomp! is too tiny in conception and too weak in execution: it is almost a tiptoe.
The performers are young, from the University of Texas, where the
show started as a campus production. They try hard and are almost enthusiastic
most of the time. I, too, tried hard. I really worked to believe. In the end 1
could not believe; the show said nothing to me. 1 kept the beat of the music
even when (most of the time) I could not hear the words. The words I heard
eddied around in an intellectual circle, in the service of no central
conception.
The message of the show is purportedly revolution, but it is an
all-purpose revolution, one uniting or deceiving everyone and no-one: the
clichŽs of brotherhood, war-resistance, sexual liberation, and left liberalism.
In the end you stand on the lawn outside, the Experience past and quite
meaningless to you.
Some of the media things come off; some of the people are
obviously very good people; some of the ideas were very good ideas and now
entitled to a dignified old age. These do not make a play. Go. It only costs $3.
Try very hard, and see how hard you can work, without direction, to accomplish
nothing.
- Morris brown
The Bird wails: "Atlanta theater has been dying a painful death for the past several
years." But hail the new hero: Michael Howard comes. Stomp in hand.
offering a mixed-media novelty.
But that is all wrong. Theater has been dying/not in Atlanta but
in the West, the same painful death that all culture must undergo before
revolutionary rejuvenation or eternal mummification. The best of it, the Living
Theatre, Che, are merely crumbs from the grand repast of the future at best or
a safety-valve offering moments of escape from an eternity of perversity.
Nor did the theater ever die in Atlanta: it was never alive here
to begin with! Not, at least, in the grand sense, but only in the form of a few
experimental fragments most notably at the Academy Theater and, lest we forget,
Arthur Burghardt's efforts in Dutchman. True, Atlanta has built an imposing
mausoleum for a never-was theater as part of the High Museum, ranking just
below Rich's as an architectural wonder. Stomp, then, may he fine despite the
company it keeps. But the real theater cannot be reborn where it never lived,
certainly not in the High Museum. Theater must be now where the people are: there,
out there, at work, at play, at war, at death, at hunger. In the streets:
guerilla to date, not too successful here, despite tremendous success
elsewhere, but that's where it's at or got to be at. Not the Atlanta Pop
Festival, but the aftermath in Piedmont Park was the real. Not what the people
from Austin can do on the stage, but what we all do here: that's real. Possible
scenarios: Riot on Fourteenth Street, Layout on Bird Night, Park Scene on
Sunday, County Jail, etc. In fact, they're all being staged, again and again,
nor is there any danger of a future takeover alienating the spontaneous culture
from the community by the activities of culture sharks a la [Steve] Cole. It's
ours, because we live it.
Ted Brodek