AMERICAN THEATRE

Manuela Infante Makes Space For Ideas

A MUNICIPAL GUARD WALKS ONSTAGE AND starts describing the causes of an accident involving a motorcycle and a tree. He somehow manages to blame the tree for the accident—or, more precisely, he singles out the dissonance between the temporality of the tree and that of the life around it as the cause of the collision. The speed of the world surrounding it, the guard suggests, made the tree’s slow movement almost disappear. “A tree takes centuries to grow, it is slow…so you could say, ‘You should have seen it coming….The storm was coming.’ But I could say, ‘Yes, officer, but you could not see it, this is a coming that cannot be seen.’”

So begins Chilean writer/director Manuela Infante’s (). Is this a procedural thriller? Are we going to find out more about the accident? Not exactly. Instead, like that tree, the play slowly starts to grow in multiple directions, bringing onstage a polyphony of voices in a very controlled chaos. While exploring the nuances of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from AMERICAN THEATRE

AMERICAN THEATRE4 min read
Tom Key A Spiritual Connection
ONE OF TOM KEY’S EARLIEST MEMORIES OF VISITING Atlanta is of attending Georgia Tech football games with his father and brother. He recalls driving from the family home in Birmingham, Ala., and watching the Atlanta skyline expand as the car journeyed
AMERICAN THEATRE4 min read
Our Supporters:
Theatre Communications Group acknowledges its engaged community of supporters* who believe in our mission to strengthen, nurture and promote the professional theatre in the U.S. and globally. We are proud to recognize the following individuals for ge
AMERICAN THEATRE2 min read
RESOURCES for THEATRES
Join a growing network of theatres and arts organizations committed to sustaining a vital community of writers, and receive valuable professional services and benefits. Connect with local playwrights, composers, and lyricists (and let us do the work)

Related Books & Audiobooks