Machinal

Mark Reaney

Machinal ,
Co-workers & Funding
iSee was developed with the support of Rhizome.org and Eyebeam.
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Description
MACHINAL is a play in nine episodes by Sophie Treadwell, first produced in 1928 and published in 1929. The setting is 1920s New York and a seaside hotel. Suggested by a notorious murder case, this expressionistic play (also produced as The Life Machine) aroused considerable attention in Russia. It's heroine, referred to as the Young Lady, is stultified by a banal society and a mechanized world, represented by a profusion of offstage sounds. The role of the lover was played on Broadway by the then-unknown Clark Gable.

When the play opened in 1928 one review called it "a tragedy of submission." Written in an expressionistic style, the play, Treadwell once said, is about "a young woman, ready, eager for life, for love...but deadened, squeezed, crushed by the machinelike quality of the life surrounding."

In the story of an innocent stenographer who supports her sickly, demanding mother, and who decides to marry her avaricious boss as if she were stepping off a cliff in a dream, there are echoes of a trial Treadwell once covered. The defendants, Ruth Snyder and Judd Gray, were sentenced to death for the murder of Snyder's husband. With this, Snyder became the first woman to die in the electric chair.


Our production of this American classic drew upon, and further refined the techniques we discovered in past i.e.VR productions. The main scenic elements consisted of virtual environments projected in stereoscopic 3D onto rear-projection screens. Thanks to assistance from the KU Instructional Technology Fund, this production employed new Digital Light Processing projectors, powerful computer workstations and state-of-the-art VR software. We also incorporated a variety live and recorded video images.

(source: www.ku.edu/~mreaney/reaney)
Keywords
  • genres
    • performance art
      • computer performances
      • video performances
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Bibliography