Performer Spotlight: Nick Dickson

Meet Charon, ferryman on the river Styx of Greek mythology. Here's what PSYCHOPOMP’s charming Nick Dickson had to say of the man that's a boat and the boat that's a man.

 
 

1. What is something that delights you about your corner of McLaren Park? 

I love that the approach to Charon is  up a hill, out of the forest, where the audience encounters the road again. It fits well with what Charon has to say. The audience are removed from the park for a moment, going uphill, and after they encounter Charon, they descend again into the park. I think the time they spend with Charon builds anticipation. It makes me think of my corner of McLaren as the mid-rollercoaster reset. You've gone through some loops and corkscrews, and now you're gathering potential energy again, getting ready for the last few events.

2. What is something that surprises you about your corner of McLaren?

It's busy. I thought that my part of the park-- a minute's walk away from the neighborhood near the Blue Water Tower-- would be less frequented. Not only are there tons of passerby, but we were stalked by a people-acclimated coyote in a late April rehearsal. I think that, even though my part of McLaren is more 'city' than other parts, it has the potential of being more on the threshold of 'urban' and 'wild' than other places. Imagine a world where the coyotes of McLaren and the toddlers of Excelsior roam the park together in harmony. Just kidding: we guides are there to manage that kind of daydream. 

3. What is something that you admire about your Psychopomp?

I may have missed something in the mythos of Charon that debunks this, BUT, what I like about the Boatman is that he is a reversal in Greek mythology. He is the most clown-like, regarding resilience. With the more famous Greek gods, times change and heroes change. The gods keep their qualities. They have temples built and are 'patron' gods of . . . 'x'. Charon is in a place where nothing changes. Souls keep coming, and he keeps ferrying. But the character of Charon changes a lot. Virgil to Seneca, to Dante, with various paintings sourced from each poet, Charon goes from a robust young Attic sailor to a skeleton in a cowl, like the Grim Reaper. But his job never changes. I like to think that Charon reinvents himself every time he ferries the souls across the rivers.

4. What is something that makes your Psychopomp joyful?

Attention. Charon has no lasting friends. To have the total attention of whomever is 'next': that is his only (doomed) chance to make friends. He is constantly meeting, loving, and letting go of each person he encounters. For millennia. So he is most joyful a) when he meets YOU, dear traveler. And b) when he lets you go, and he gets to go meet the next person. Waiting becomes anticipation. Anticipation becomes joy at its fulfillment. Charon will always enjoy the current person, and he'll always look forward to the next person, and there will always be a next person. He's got it made, poor guy.

Photos by Lauren Matley  Costume by Brooke Jennings

The PSYCHOPOMP Experience

On a warm, breezy Thursday afternoon I'm standing in McLaren Park beneath 100-year-old trees. Far off to my right is the bay, glittering in the sunlight. Everything – the scents, the little paths running between bushes and trees, the immense quiet, broken only by the squawk of a crow and the rustle of the breeze - brings back memories of Australia, of my childhood years, of times both delicious and sad. I've left my laptop back in Berkeley and my phone in the car. I have a bottle of water and a banana and a jacket in my bag. I want to be truly present for this experience.

This is the scene for PSYCHOPOMP, an amazing walk-through theatrical experience devised by Ava Roy and staged by We Players till late June. It's a genuinely transformational 90-minute journey that you take – by yourself, if you want, or in a pair (I was by myself) – to be greeted at various stops along the way by an actor, gorgeously attired, like some kind of nymph that has emerged from the forest. At every stop, the figure quietly waiting is there just for you, and comes alive just for you - the walk is staggered so that you (and your friend if you are in a pair) are alone with each actor, whose beautiful performance gently lifts you out of your customary world, even out of your learned language.

Taking the journey, I felt that I could see more lucidly who I really am and what really matters. No one tells you what to think and feel - the experience is your own, born of your relationship with the actor and the beautiful parkland, with dogs sniffing in busy oblivion in the distance and ducks gliding majestically over a nearby stream. It's an extraordinary experience, and I am so glad that I got the chance to be there, letting We Players guide me on a gentle trek through the true (non-landfill) part of San Francisco, an expedition that also leads me into familiar, and unfamiliar, parts of myself.

-Philippa Kelly, Resident Dramaturg, California Shakespeare Theater

Performer Spotlight: Chris Steele

 
 

Here’s another PSYCHOPOMP Performer Spotlight!

Meet Val Ky and Rie! AKA the band formerly knows as the Valkyries!  Our dear Chris Steele puts a punk rock spin on this Norse classic. Here are Chris' thoughts about the site and the Valkyries.

What is something that delights you about your corner of McLaren Park?
How secluded from the world it feels.

What is something that surprises you about your corner of McLaren?
The rock formations peaking out of the hills.

What is something that you admire about your Psychopomp?
How readily they embrace change.

What is something that makes your Psychopomp joyful?
War. And music. And love.

Don't miss your chance to meet Anubis and the other guides of PSYCHOPOMP - get your ticket today

Photo credit: Lauren Matley
Costumes: Brooke Jennings

Performer Spotlight: Alan Coyne

 
 

Meet Cat Sith (pronounced Cat Shee)! Originating from Celtic mythology, our very clever Alan Coyne put a quantum spin on the character, using the famous thought experiment of Schrödinger's Cat as further inspiration. Here's some insight from Alan about the site and Cat Sith.

What delights you about your corner of McLaren Park?

The Calibi-Yau bushes, with their holomorphic n-forms vanishing nowhere.

What surprises you about your corner of the park?

My inability to find it until suddenly I'm in it. It's almost as though my act of observing it causes it to spring into existence.

What do you admire about your psychopomp?

His ability to remain in superposition as both scientific thought experiment and modern-day myth.

What brings your psychopomp joy?

My psychopomp finds joy in moments of breakthrough, like when something seemingly inexplicable is suddenly understood. And vice versa.

Don't miss your chance to meet Cat Sith, Anubis, and the other guides of PSYCHOPOMP!

Photo credit: Lauren Matley

Costumes: Brooke Jennings

Performer Spotlight: Drew Watkins

 
 

Meet Anubis! Our jackal-headed friend that reminds us that dog is just god spelled backward! Drew Watkins plays this mighty figure with grace in PSYCHOPOMP. 

Here's some insight from Drew about the space and his take on the Egyptian god.

1. What is something that delights you about your corner of McLaren Park? 

The golden light passing through, over and around the trees keeps me inspired. It creates such a lovely contrast between light and shadow.

2. What is something that surprises you about your corner of McLaren?

The wind is listening to us all the time, and even responds on occasion. It will howl for minutes then still in a moment of emphasis. My ever present audience member.

3. What is something that you admire about your Psychopomp?

The playfulness of Anubis is the biggest surprise. This god of mummification and guardian of souls, really just wants to connect with the joy and the light of this world. 

4. What is something that makes your Psychopomp joyful?

Anubis loves company. Working in isolation to makes the dog god eager for human interaction, and he perks up with excitement whenever he receives a visitor.

Don't miss your chance to meet Anubis and the other Psychopomps! 

Photo credit: Lauren Matley 
Costumes by Brooke Jennings

Our 5th annual Canciones del Mar concert was a dream!

"THE SACRED RADIANCE OF THE SUN"

- King Lear

Our 5th annual Canciones del Mar concert was a dream. Thank you dancers, listeners, and stellar musicians! 

Photos: ACT OUT Photography, Jim Norrena

Photos: ACT OUT Photography, Jim Norrena

A standing ovation for the jaw-dropping sunset streaking resplendent colors across the sky, melting everything into liquid gold, and slipping off into violet clouds. 

Big thanks to our friends at San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park and to the warm wooden embrace of ferryboatEureka. We'll be back! 

Meantime, the songs of el pulpo (the octopus) y el calamar (the squid), of sailboats and canoes and the teasing love affair of the waves against the sand, murmur in our memories...

Photo: Lauren Matley

Photo: Lauren Matley


Mother Lear starts this weekend with private home performances in SF and San Anselmo!

On opening weekend you can find mama Lear on the roof of a dramatic SOMA warehouse, surrounded by the urban jungle, as well as amongst live oaks upon a golden hilltop. 

Be sure to catch We Players' trademark exterior open space performances of Mother Lear in the South Bay at Montalvo Arts Center, and in San Francisco at the beautifully expansiveMcLaren Park. Find unique intimate performances under The Sukkah at The Jewish Community Center East Bay, and at other spectacular private residences around the Bay Area.

Mother Lear draws ever near

"YOU ARE WELCOME HITHER"

- King Lear

We Players - Mother Lear 2017 - 750px.jpg

We are thrilled to announce our next production!

MOTHER LEAR

An irascible scholar with dementia communicates with her caretaker daughter using only the text of Shakespeare's King Lear, as the two struggle with aging, love, and their own balance of power. 

A facilitated conversation on the themes of death and dying immediately follows each performance.

Join us at unique and intimate venues around San Francisco Bay this autumn to experience this powerful two-person distillation of one of the Bard's greatest works.