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Richard Hollman's BACK AND FORTH To Premiere At Central Park's East Meadow

Two actors, two mics, and an audience equipped with headphones to observe and eavesdrop at their leisure.

By: Sep. 22, 2021
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Richard Hollman's BACK AND FORTH To Premiere At Central Park's East Meadow  Image

Running just 3 weekends beginning October 7th, Back and Forth by Richard Hollman will premiere in Central Park's East Meadow, hidden among your everyday park-goers. Two actors, two mics, and an audience equipped with headphones to observe and eavesdrop at their leisure.

Back and Forth is an intimate story of two old friends reuniting for the first time since a forced period of extended social isolation (yes, that period of social isolation) and discovering that despite having felt basically immobile for the past 18 months, quite a lot has changed.

Audience members will receive an email 24 hours before their performance telling them where to enter the park and how to recognize the house manager, who will advise them on how to tune in to the show and where they may want to sit, though ultimately the audience will decide how they want to observe this particular game of catch.

As to why this was the play he found himself writing during the pandemic, Hollman had this to say:

"I've had the basic idea for this play for years. I'm a former baseball player and I love watching even the simple act of two people playing catch. On a surface level, it's exciting to me as the basis for a play because you can't act it, you just have to do it, and there's bound to be an uncontrollable variation from performance to performance. Even professional baseball players would have difficulty replicating the exact same game of catch twice. And while it's essentially repetitious, there are stakes, namely those that exist between the two players personally.

Additionally, I've been interested in the idea of physical distance as emotional distance for a long time. New York City is a place where so many people cross into our visual field daily. There's a forced intimacy with those near you and a fading into the background of those far away. But every individual of course has a complicated and intricate inner life. I'm obsessed with what's happening with the people in apartments across the street and people across a field in Central Park. And now, after having had to be physically far from those we love because of the pandemic, what happens when we come back together? How have we changed? Can physical distance coupled with the emotional intimacy of hearing someone right in your ears help us empathize with strangers across a field? We use technology to communicate with others from afar but what about a chance to use it to hear a conversation we're not part of?"

Tickets available at supersecretarts.com




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