LONETheater is a site-specific project for one audience member at a time.
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Each location is a different performance – directions to the venues will be provided after you purchase your tickets. Choose your journey below:
Exodus by Matías Umpierrez BUY TICKETS
Translated by Ben Mandell
Location: Apartment, Duration: 30 minutes Performers: Debbie Saivetz & Calaine Schafer Notes: Three flights of stairs to enter building, not handicap accessible.
Synopsis: In just one year, an entire family breaks apart and disappears, leaving nothing but two bodies lost in time and space.
Pact by Matías Umpierrez BUY TICKETS
Translated by Brenda Werth
Location: Abandoned building Duration: 40 minutes Performers: Richard Hutzler, Ben Mandell, Gustavo Ranieri Notes: Performance includes walking up and down stairs, not handicap accessible.
Synopsis: Cowards do not go down in history. A couple of men carry out a plan, hidden in an undercover office, and try to make justice for a lost cause.
Amnesia by Matías Umpierrez BUY TICKETS
Translated by Brenda Werth
Location: Theater Duration: 30 minutes Performer: Lindsey Liberatore Notes: Performance includes walking down one flight of steps, not handicap accessible.
Synopsis: What lies between the curtains of the mind? Through temporary amnesia a woman’s sense of her own presence in the theater emerges.
Far by Matías Umpierrez BUY TICKETS
Translated by Ben Mandell and April Sweeney
Location: Central Park Duration: 30 minutes Performer: Lily Narbonne Notes: Performance includes fifteen (15) minutes of walking.
Synopsis: A young woman discovers the life story of an unfamiliar elder after a chance encounter. What do we learn about ourselves from another’s fight with prejudice?
Witness by Matías Umpierrez BUY TICKETS
Translated by Patricia Masera and April Sweeney
Location: Subway Duration: 30 minutes Performer: April Sweeney Notes: Performance will take place both inside the station and on the train. Metro card not provided.
Synopsis: Watching the lives of others is stimulating, but what happens when those stories become a reflection of our own lives?