In âUnspoken,â six friends choose love over fear
91´ŤĂ˝âs 2016-17 theatre season continues with âUnspoken,â a 2016 work byĚýNew Play FestivalĚýwinner and PhD candidate Kevin Crowe. The intimate portrait of six friends living in New York City runs Feb. 15-19 in CUâsĚýLoft Theatre.
Exploring how hope is born from tragedy, âUnspokenâ follows three couples and delves into the ways unexpected events alter all of their lives. Several characters are based on the real-life friends of Crowe, who grew up on Long Island and lived in New York City for many years.
â[âUnspokenâ is] about choosing love over fear,â Crowe says. âI want people to leave the play feeling that they should hold tighter to the people they love. All of the plays I admire most are ultimately about appreciating the moment and appreciating those who are with you during your brief time on Earth.â
When the play begins, and when tragedy hits, many of its characters are fearful. Candace, an attorney, suddenly learns sheâs pregnant with twins and wonders whether her husband, Oscar, can grow up, let go of the past and be there for his family. Kyle, a classical pianist, steps away from his instrument in the hopes of reconnecting with his partner, Bryan. Daniela, a choreographer, is preparing for the opening of a new work when disaster strikes and she begins to question her own values.
âThereâs a timeless quality to the script,â says Lindsay Weitkamp, who played Candace in a staged reading of the play last year. âItâs part of the human condition to wrestle with feelings of love, feelings of fearâto wrestle with that duality is common at some point in everyoneâs life. And when you realize that youâve made it through with the comfort of companions around youâyou see that those people are the roots that give us hope.â
Crowe says the play is as philosophical as it is emotionalâin fact, it was inspired by Jean-Paul Sartreâs essay â,â a hallmark of existential thought. Despite that, Crowe says, audiences need no prior knowledge of existentialism to understand the playâs themes.
âWhen people think about existential philosophy, they think itâs very removed from real life, that itâs the idea of questioning meaning,â he says. âBut in many ways, it comes down to this idea of really letting go of fear and creating your own reality. We create our own meanings through the decisions we make and through the courage we need to to survive in this irrational universe.â
Itâs something to keep in mind for todayâs political times, says Stephanie Prugh, who directed the staged reading last year. No matter where you stand, itâs best to unite and lobby for what you believe in.
âI think thereâs a beauty and a need for a story like this that shows us that we are not alone as we wrestle with our demons,â Pugh says. âWe all feel intense fear and intense love, but we can choose which of those to focus on. We can either fight for something or stand by and allow things we donât want to happenâitâs up to us.â
Ěý
Performances
Wednesday, Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 16, 7:30 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 17, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 18, 2 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 18, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 19, 2 p.m.
Tickets for âUnspokenâ start at $16.ĚýTo purchase tickets, visit the CU Presents box office in person (972 Broadway), call 303-492-8008 during business hours orĚýanytime. All online and phone orders are subject to a service fee. To schedule interviews or for other media information, contact Jill Kimball atĚýjill.kimball@colorado.edu.ĚýPlease note that âUnspokenâ contains full frontal male nudity and is intended for mature audiences only.
Coming up later this season is â,â a classic, outrageous musical full of campy fun, characters from grade B horror flicks, 1960s beach party jams and vintage rock ânâ roll; and âPeter and the Starcatcherâ by Rick Elice, the hit Broadway show about Peter Panâs pre-Neverland adventures in an orphanage, aboard a weather-beaten ship holding precious cargoĚýand on a magical remote island.