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Arts & Culture

黑料不打烊 Stage Presents the Critically Acclaimed Play 鈥楾he Wolves鈥

Thursday, January 16, 2020, By Joanna Penalva
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College of Visual and Performing ArtsDepartment of Drama黑料不打烊 Stage

The Wolves graphicThe 黑料不打烊 Stage season continues with the critically acclaimed Sarah DeLappe鈥檚 Pulitzer Prize-nominated drama about nine young women soccer players. Co-produced with the in the College of Visual and Performing Arts and directed by Melissa Rain Anderson, 鈥淭he Wolves鈥 runs Jan. 22鈥揊eb. 16 in the Storch Theatre at the 黑料不打烊 Stage/SU Drama Complex, 820 E. Genesee St., 黑料不打烊.

Set on an indoor soccer field somewhere in suburban America, 鈥淭he Wolves鈥 unfolds over six wintry Saturdays as the players warm up for each successive match. Working their way through drills and stretches, the 16- and 17-year-old teammates speak openly about what is on their minds: Cambodian history, weekend plans, boyfriends and much more. Their conversations are frank, raw, uncensored and, as director Anderson points out, absolutely true.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a voice we haven鈥檛 heard. The teenage girl. It鈥檚 basically a locker room of 16- and 17-year-old women. And that鈥檚 a voice that I don鈥檛 think we鈥檝e ever had the opportunity to peer in on,鈥 Anderson says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know any other play like it. It鈥檚 rare, and it鈥檚 raw, and sometimes relentless, and sometimes uncomfortable, like maybe we shouldn鈥檛 be listening to this talk.鈥

The sometimes-surprising frankness of the dialogue is intentional and purposeful. In writing 鈥淭he Wolves,鈥 DeLappe was determined to create 鈥測oung women as full-blooded athletes and complex characters, not reduced to types: daughters, sex objects, girlfriends.鈥

She explains: 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 interested in recreating any stereotypical version of female adolescents in the suburbs of America. I was interested in trying to treat them as complicated, multidimensional people. They鈥檙e just figuring out who they are and what the world is and what their place in the world is. I think a lot of the play is actually tracking these shifts in identity and this struggle to find out who they are within the peer group.鈥

A significant part of the success of DeLappe鈥檚 writing is the way the characters reveal themselves to each other through fast-paced overlapping dialogue that exposes their individual strengths and vulnerabilities as they seemingly banter about the quotidian matters of their lives.

鈥淵oung women love it; it rings really true to them. I鈥檝e heard over and over, 鈥榯hat鈥檚 exactly how it is,鈥欌 says Anderson, who successfully directed a production at St. Louis Repertory last year. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not used to seeing younger women talk like that. But I think there is power in it. They own their bodies. They own their words. They own everything about it. It can be shocking and jolting, but it鈥檚 absolutely the truth. You know that this is how they鈥檙e speaking to each other. Maybe not to their parents or their teachers, but yes, to each other.鈥

With multiple conversations often occurring simultaneously, 鈥淭he Wolves鈥 presents exciting challenges for the cast and director. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very much like conducting a nine-piece orchestra,鈥 Anderson says. It also makes for a particularly engaging experience for the audience.

鈥淵ou never sit back,鈥 she explains. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e like a detective. You鈥檙e leaning in trying to figure out what they are saying, what the relationships are.鈥

In addition, much of the time the players are warming up or practicing soccer drills as they verbally spar with each other. Anderson says DeLappe has written the play as if it were a soccer match. 鈥淭hey pass the ball, they grab the ball, they play as a team, and they play very aggressively with their words. The form is completely fascinating to me.鈥

DeLappe says the physicality has been important to her since she started writing 鈥淭he Wolves.鈥 She likens the team to women warriors preparing for battle. The play, she says, is a story filled with young women in which they aren鈥檛 girlfriends or daughters or love interests or sexual objects, but athletes鈥攚here it was about their bodies, but about their ownership of their own bodies, and the strength of their own bodies.

鈥淲hen I started writing 鈥楾he Wolves,鈥 I knew I wanted it to be my version of the WWII movie, only on a soccer field rather than a battlefield,鈥 DeLappe says. 鈥淎s a kid, I would see so many superhero movies, Westerns, sci-fi movies, all, of course, with almost all-male casts, except maybe for the obligatory girlfriend, the mother back home or the prostitute with the heart of gold. All of these films depict how these disparate men became one organism. They had to in order to survive. I wanted women to have access to the same material, with no limitations.鈥

Throughout the run of 鈥淭he Wolves,鈥 黑料不打烊 Stage will partner with the YWCA of 黑料不打烊 & Onondaga County鈥檚 鈥淪occer for Success鈥 program, offered nationally by the U.S. Soccer Foundation.聽Soccer for Success, like 鈥淭he Wolves,鈥 is less about soccer than it is about something much deeper鈥攖eaching critical life skills and healthy habits through trained coach-mentors,聽building聽confidence and collaboration聽and sharing聽new skills that may even provide a pathway to college.聽The program provides no-cost soccer instruction and uniforms to area children each year, focused on those for whom the costs and location of private soccer development programs聽would be a barrier.聽聽As part of 黑料不打烊 Stage鈥檚 commitment to community partnerships, a cleat drive for Soccer for Success聽will be held at the theatre throughout the production. Please consider donating new or gently used soccer cleats, which can be placed in the collection bins in the lobby.

  • Author

Joanna Penalva

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