Ben Katchor: He's not just good at drawing!Having long been a fan of his graphic work (or "picture stories",
as he calls them) in The Jew of New York and Julius Knipl, Real Estate
Photographer, and having seen his previous foray into musical
theatrical collaboration (The Rosenbach Company) on a particularly
awesome date a few years back, I already had some darn warm feelings in
general towards the prodigiously talented
Ben Katchor.
So it was with much excitement that I joined the great man, his
wonderful wife Susan, and composer Mark Mulcahy for a preview of The
Slugs of Kayrol Island a few weeks ago. The show, Katchor's second
collaboration with Mulcahy, is a delight. It tells the story of a
well-intentioned, well-to-do young lady who becomes obsessed with the
plight of exploited workers in far-off tropics. That she joins forces
with a young man who's into the poetry of vintage appliance instruction
manuals, and that together they travel to this far-off tropic to save
said workers, is only the beginning of the story. Katchor's
imagination, needless to say, is a vast and quirky wonderland.
The sets are these beautifully designed, moving screens onto which
Katchor's drawings are projected, so that what you're watching is a
whole new genre unto itself: graphic musical theater. The actors move
with and around the screens to make up what feels like one, breathing,
changing, colorful, organic whole. Katchor's drawings and libretto are
vibrant and engaging, as ever, and the score is foot-tappingly
excellent. The NYT's Ben Brantley, in his
rave,
calls it "an answered prayer for anyone who has dreamed of living
inside a graphic novel." (So it seems that sometimes those
MacArthur
"genius" Foundation Grant folks really know what they're doing, huh?)
After the show we all shared some delicious potato pierogi at
Little Poland, which I report not because I am a starfucker, but
because sometimes those Wow-I'm-Breaking-Bread-With-An
-Artist-I-Have-Always-Admired
evenings, which are so cool and inspiring -- and which can make a
certain type of Lifelong New York Romantic feel like "Hey, damn! Is
this my life? Alright!" -- are nice to share. It was good.
The show has been extended at the Vineyard Theater and will run through March 16, so get a move on.