Liminal Performance Group: Archive

Brecht Turns ‘Sins’ Ironic Side Out

The Oregonian (Portland, OR), September 5, 2002
Richard Wattenberg, Special Writer, The Oregonian

Liminal group’s adaptation of “The Seven Deadly Sins” is a sharply penetrating work by German playwright Bertolt Brecht who envisioned a theater that would challenge audiences to look at the world with fresh eyes. Laying siege to what he saw as bourgeois complacency, the Marxist and moralist wanted his audiences to confront perplexing social and ethical contradictions.

Such intentions motivated Brecht and composer Kurt Weill when they collaborated on the 1933 musical drama “The Seven Deadly Sins.” Presented by Liminal Performance Group at the all-night dance club Panorama, this complex piece, subtitled a “Ballet Cantata,” defies traditional genre categories. In it, opera, dance and 1930s-style cabaret jazz intermingle, and the result is a sardonically ironic play that turns popular morality on its head.

Translated under the title “The Seven Deadly Sins of the Petty Bourgeoisie,” this one-act work follows the young woman Anna in her efforts to earn enough money to buy her struggling family a house on the Mississippi River. To this end, Anna travels to seven U.S. cities. In each, she tackles one of the seven deadly sins. Having triumphed over all “temptations” and accumulated a small fortune, Anna returns to her family at play’s end.

The twist is that the “sins” she overcomes may not be sins at all but just the obstacles the “petty bourgeoisie” believes it must surmount to succeed in a world where money is the final measure. For instance, Pride turns out to be self-respect, and Wrath is merely moral outrage at mistreatment of the oppressed. To “make it” in a dollar-driven society, Anna cannot afford to yield to either these or the other five so-called “deadly sins.”

The restraint Anna learns alienates her from her wholesome instincts, and Brecht divides her into two characters (a device he used in later plays). The brashly practical Anna sings Brecht’s narrative lyrics while imposing an inverted sense of righteousness on the impulsive, creative alter-ego Anna, who dances and mimes the action throughout the play.

Liminal wonderfully captures the disturbing tone of this piece and, in Panorama, finds the perfect venue for it.

Director Bryan Markovitz presents the original German text (with projected subtitles) but translates its 1930s decadent sleaziness into a contemporary leather-and-bondage idiom. For instance, the wrath that Brecht’s Anna feels when witnessing a Douglas Fairbanks-type star mistreat a trick horse here becomes rage when she views one porn star sadistically abusing another.

Lyndee Mah sings the role of the practical Anna with power, capturing the blend of abrasive raspiness and cool nonchalance the role requires. As the impulsive Anna, Georgia Luce physically depicts the character’s evolution from blank-faced innocent victim to jaded cynic.

At the piano and as music director, Stephen Alexander does well by Weill, but director Markovitz deserves the highest praise for the stunning sharpness of vision he brings to the production. The 13 performers skillfully fill the acting space with vivid movement, and Markovitz integrates projections and video into the stage picture.

The Seven Deadly Sins (2002)

In late summer 2002, Liminal produced Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill’s lesser-known epic sung ballet, The Seven Deadly Sins. Liminal’s hour-long electric cabaret featured the original German score sung by mezzo-soprano Lyndee Mah, a live chorus of male singers, a digital orchestra by John Berendzen, and live piano by Stephen Alexander. The performance included a cast of 12 and was directed by Bryan Markovitz (who received a 2003 Portland Drammy for this work) with movement direction by Catherine Egan and Amanda Boekelheide, and an original Liminal translation by Emily Ford that was projected in supertitles above the stage.

The short, yet technically demanding opera took place at Panorama, a run down cavernous queer dance club and college-age meat market. The strange mix of high and lowbrow entertainment brought together diverse audiences for a totally unexpected evening of live and electronic music, a constant flow of dance and action, and a dazzling array of lights and media.




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