I Sing the Body Electric

Jack Mann Complex, 53 Solway Ave, Ilam (University of Canterbury's College of Education Campus), Christchurch

19/06/2012 - 01/07/2012

Production Details



I Sing the Body Electric is a Free Theatre production in collaboration with the University of Canterbury’s innovative HIT Lab NZ (Human Interface Technology Laboratory).  

Based on the infamous Don Juan legend, I Sing the Body Electric is a live exploration of the seductive nature of technology in modern life. Developed out of Free Theatre’s 2011 work-in-progress Passion, Pulse, and Power, I Sing the Body Electric explores the latest interactive technology through movement and sound.  

The sterile and electrically charged set by designer Chris Reddington and intermedial designer Ryan Reynolds, situates the audience in the centre of a dark jungle of electrical cords. Revolving around the audience is the journey of two sailors who are seduced and destroyed by a succession of aerial females, each embodying a different technology, and each representing a different male fantasy.

I Sing the Body Electric considers what seduction meant in the past and what it may mean now. Through experimentation and exploration in the theatre and the lab, Free Theatre explores how the parallel creation of technology and of women from male desire can become beautiful and seductive, but at the same time can turn repetitive and self-destructive.

Featuring the Free Theatre company; Stuart McKay, George Parker, Emma Johnston, Marian McCurdy, Greta Bond, Coralie Winn, and Naomi Campion.

Costume design by Sylvia Houston. Lighting design by Richard Till.

This production is brought to you with the support of Creative New Zealand and the University of Canterbury’s Theatre and Film Studies Department.

Free Theatre Christchurch is New Zealand’s longest running experimental theatre company. Over the years a wide range of emerging and established artists, including poets, filmmakers, sculptors, writers, musicians, dancers and actors, have collaborated within the Free Theatre to perform in various spaces around New Zealand. “For quarter of a century Free Theatre has refined cultural horizons and shaped Christchurch’s perceptions of contemporary theatre.” – The Press.

For all media enquiries and interview requests please contact Naomi Campion on naomi@freetheatre.org.nz or call 021-0256-1384. Thank you.

I Sing the Body Electric Performance Information:

8.00pm: Tuesday 19 June – Sunday 1 July 2012

Location: Jack Mann Complex, 53 Solway Ave, Ilam, Christchurch (University of Canterbury’s College of Education Campus)

Tickets: Waged $25. Unwaged $15 (Bookings recommended due to limited capacity)

Cash bar available on site from 7.30pm.

Online Bookings are available through www.freetheatre.org.nz or please email info@freetheatre.org.nz  or phone 021-0256-1384 




A rare visitation of exceptional theatre

Review by Lindsay Clark 20th Jun 2012

This production, like many from the rich imagination of director Peter Falkenberg, flies free of traditional theatre making and, like many of his most successful ventures, it is the result of collaboration with the University of Canterbury’s HIT Lab (Human Interface Technology Laboratory).

Such enterprise in the theatre is an exciting but risky business. Multiple possibilities still have to fuse into one event for one audience, which will make of the experience something else again … and come back for more. Puzzles are addictive and although the play has a clear, observable structure, it is its challenge to the senses which are memorable.  

There is no dialogue, only sound produced in the moment by voice and body, frequently interacting with an extraordinary set (Chris Reddington). The audience is seated within a square, itself defined by a double row of dangling lengths of electrical flex . Attached to some of these is an assortment of everyday domestic appliances and sockets, which will be used to reinforce the sense of an ‘electric jungle’.

Mostly we are in the dark, but flashes and projections as well as dramatic atmospheric light (Richard Till) will trace the dream journey of two yearning sailors around the four sides and their encounters with female images familiar to us from myth and fairy tale – the Siren from Homer, Lorelei, Rapunzel The Black Widow and Medusa. These potent fantasies are way up in the high airspace, so that the dreamers must climb and manoeuvre through the tangles of flex.

The programme notes explain well the importance and sophisticated technology of the arrangement, which interacts with the performers – “microphoned surfaces and costumes; live camera feeds and projections….two-way mirrors; lasers; movement sensors that transform the actor into an audio waveform generator; and colour detection whereby the position and movement within a video frame trigger and manipulate the playback of recorded sounds. The piece culminates in an immersive virtual reality environment that an actor can participate in through the use of tracking cameras.” Software for this extraordinary sequence is provided by Steven Lemon.

Of course we are not – and are not meant to be – aware of all the workings. The seeming magic of each seduction encounter is laden with sights and sounds at once intriguing and unsettling, as the laws of nature are left behind. Herein lies the puzzle and the delight.

There is a theme for those who dare unravel it, and it is an interesting one; namely that technology and women, at least as created by male fantasy, provide at once beauty and repetitive frustration, even danger. In the end desire is unattainable.

Intrepid performers tackle the human side of things. Stuart McKay and George Parker are the seekers. The temptresses, in costumes (Sylvia Houston) well tuned to the boldness of the venture, are played by Emma Johnston, Marian McCurdy, Greta Bond, Coralie Winn and Naomi Campion. All manage the challenges of set and action with seeming ease.

Christchurch is indeed fortunate that this group, recognised internationally for its innovative theatre-making, has survived the recent threat of closure to Theatre and Film Studies at the University of Canterbury. With its focus on experimental theatre, it provides a dimension rarely otherwise visited.  

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