| Written
and directed by Thomas Riccio,
UTD’s Artistic Director and Professor
of Performance Studies, Thomas Riccio
Set and Costumes by Scott Osborn
Lights and special effects by Jeff Stover
Digital and Animation by The Institute of
Interactive Arts and Engineering
Kartasi is a world premiere Sci-Fi
thriller written and directed by Thomas
Riccio and produced in collaboration with
UTD Institute of Interactive Arts and Engineering.
Kartasi combines live performance,
digital, video and animation imaging.
The performance reveals the time after
time, when the Great Separation had wiped
out all but fragments of memory of what
existed before. The Overlords control The
Machine, a bio-mechanical entity that connects
everything with 'Tubers'. Through the use
of the 'Tubers' the Overlords feed and pacify
their inferiors who live in the Valley with
memories and The Serum. In this world, Memory
and The Serum, a mysterious energy-intoxicant,
are horded and prized. But all is challenged
when Kartasi, a mutant Hoi Polloi from the
Outlands stumbles into the Valley introducing
a new memory, altering The Machine and reality.
When Kartasi enters The Machine, Memory
will be set free. Or is it all a Serum dream?
Using a recombinant narrative technique,
the sequence of events will alter, adding
and subtracting memory, for each performance.
Is Kartasi a spy, a villain, a victim, or
a hero? That depends on what memory you
are watching and controls and best navigates
the Machine.
THOMAS RICCIO is a Professor
of Performance Studies and Artistic Director
at the University of Texas at Dallas. Previous
positions include Professor of Theatre at
the University of Alaska Fairbanks, Artistic
Director of Chicago's Organic Theater Company
and the Dramaturg/Resident Director at the
Cleveland Play House. He also served as
Associate Literary Director at the American
Repertory Theatre at Harvard and was research
assistant to Robert Brustein. As a free-lance
director he stage production at the Teatro
d’ Roma (national theatre of Italy),
La Mama ETC, and The New York Theatre Workshop,
among others. In recent years he has worked
extensively in the area of indigenous performance,
serving as Artistic Director of Tuma Theatre,
an Alaska Native performance group in Fairbanks.
He has developed and directed performances
with the Zulu of South Africa, the Sakha
National Theatre of central Siberia, the
Greenland Inuit, several tribal groups in
Zambia, Sri Lankan Tamils, the !Xuu and
Khwe Bushmen of the lower Kalahari, and
a pre-Christian Slavic group in St. Petersburg.
He has conducted workshops and presented
lectures throughout the U.S. and Internationally
he has conducted workshops and lectures
in Sweden, Germany, Finland, England, Denmark,
Australia and Burkina Faso. He was a Visiting
Professor at the Korean National University
for the Arts and the University of Dar es
Salaam. In 1999 he received a APPEX (Asian
Pacific Performance Exchange) fellowship
at UCLA. He conducted research in folk and
Shamanic performance of the Miao people
of Hunan, China in 2001. His play Comeback
Für Elvis was produced by Frankfurt’s
Kleist Theatre and ran in repertory during
their 1995-96 season. His articles have
appeared in TDR, TheatreForum, Theatre
Topics, Theatre Research International,
Performing Arts Journal, and Shamans
Drum. For the Fairbanks Drama Association
he wrote and directed a highly acclaimed
production of Pipe Dreams, a play
based on oral histories from the building
of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. He was a panelist
(1999-02) for the Edward Albee, Last Frontier
Theatre Conference in Valdez, Alaska. His
current interests include performance and
research projects with the Miao people China
and in the Kisumu district, Kenya. He was
in Nairobi during the spring of 2002 where
he did workshops at the Kenya National Theatre
and for the Edupuppet 2002 Festival. Mellen
Press recently published his book, Reinventing
Traditional Alaska Native Performance
(2003). His article on Kenyan puppet theatre
recently appeared in PAJ, Performing
Arts Journal (2004). He is currently
completing his book of travel stories and
developing an Immersion Narrative and Cyber
Ritual project in collaboration with the
Institute for Interactive Arts and Engineering.
This summer he conducted a Meta-Media Laboratory
for performers, animators, programmers,
and game designers at the University of
Texas at Dallas.
|