Violence Made Me Feel Like I’d Left My Body. Physical Theater Helped Me Return
The body tells many stories—ones of solace and delight, indulgence and languishing, stories of ache, illness, love.
in my body
Towards a Poor Theatre
shhhhh
abyss
Again and again, I watched clips from a 1975 CBS special called “The Body Speaks.” It features Grotowski’s artistic collaborator Ryszard Cieślak in conversation with theater critic Margaret Croyden. The special includes black-and-white footage of a bare-chested Cieślak whipping his hair as he performs the plastiques. His fingers move with vigorous intent and suddenly jerk in opposition to his wrist as he writhes through space. His shoulder and neck enter the dialogue, then his torso and legs. The plastiques are an unbroken and unplanned stream of movements, each responding to the last, transforming the body into a strange, flowing creature.
“You have to feel your body open,” Cieślak says in “The Body Speaks,” “and you have to go beyond the body, go beyond the obstacles, go beyond the limits of the body.”
Alone in the rehearsal hall, I let my hair hang down and moved my head impulsively, the way I’d seen Cieślak move, pulling my shoulder up in slow arches before my elbow kicked away from me. I moved in response to internal stimulus, following images in my mind as they arose—a chain-link fence at dawn, damp tree bark, the sensation of a bee sting. I began slowly, but soon my whole body twisted and thrashed. The longer I spent in the exercise, the more I felt what I can only describe as a shock to the system.
Sweat formed on my brow. As I stayed with the sensations in my body, I felt a brief moment of panic. But I was alone, I reminded myself. I was safe. And the more vigorously I moved, the more I sank into a feeling of liquid astonishment at my very anatomy. I rolled my wrists and wove my fingers pointedly through the air and was filled with reverence for the three bones of the arm, the twenty-seven bones of the human hand. I’d never given much thought to my fist, its tendon sheaths and ligaments, the beauty of the tender meat of the thumb. But in the exercise, the mere existence of my fingertips suddenly seemed cause for celebration. In my body, joy, and also rage.
I felt like a physical embodiment of the religious iconography of my youth, a heart ablaze. But instead of energy directed up toward the heavens, the energy was everywhere. It was both within and without, erupting like a sunburst, even when I slowed down, even when I was finally still.
The body tells many stories—ones of solace and delight, indulgence and languishing, stories of ache, illness, love. My job as an actor was to keep my heart close to my mouth and to put it in my fingertips too. I could worry about this body being susceptible to injury and harm. I could hide, spending a lifetime small and hoping for mercy. Or I could begin the task of gently returning to myself, to learn full corporeal praise. I could touch my body. I could honor it. I could ask questions of it and give it gifts: What do you want in your arms and on your tongue? Where do you want to be? Whose hands do you want in yours?
Discovering Grotowski’s methodology was the beginning of a practice that would compel me, both in the theater and out, to put my legs in motion toward things I love, toward what quickens the heart, toward what expands me.
Before each rehearsal, I worked through the plastiques. And in performance, I raised my arm and reached. In concentrated movements, I could feel the energy coursing through me, internal patterns like tree branches appearing after a lightning strike, electricity’s path made visible. I opened my mouth, threw back my head, and spread my fingers as if my power could blister a message onto a man’s back: Remember me.
After I laid the curse, the story shot toward the moment the ghost would be seen in her entirety, the play’s final moments. After a clap of thunder, a door swung open, and there I stood, soaked to the bone, my body pulsing for just the flicker of a single, harrowing second before the blackout. I was in her body. I was in mine.