POTATO STAMP MEGALOMANIAC

19 Tory St, Wellington

23/02/2016 - 27/02/2016

Basement Theatre, Lower Greys Ave, Auckland

07/06/2016 - 18/06/2016

NZ Fringe Festival 2016 [reviewing supported by WCC]

Production Details



On Madness and Potatoes – Fringe Play Reflects on Manic Episode  

It’s 4 am and Andrew is still carving potato stamps.

He’s tied his flatmates’ groceries from the ceiling. 

He’s started giving away their belongings. 

He has a growing sense he might be becoming a twenty-first century prophet, which makes getting his essay in on time difficult, to say the least. 

And on top of that, the potatoes seem to be taking on some kind of magical property. 

Following on from the highly physical “GOD-BELLY”, Pressure Point is presenting their most recent play, “POTATO STAMP MEGALOMANIAC”as part of the 2016 NZ Fringe Festival.

The play is a solo show, written and performed by Andrew Gunn, with original music by Tom Dennison (from Heroes for Sale.)

The play is autobiographical, investigating a period in Andrew’s life, in 2012, when he went manic.

It investigates the period through Andrew’s eyes; the sense of endless possibility, power and exhilaration that comes with the early stages of mania.  He pursues delusions of grandeur while going about his day-to-day life at university and in his flat.  He begins making a potato stamp font that will save the world. 

The content may sound heavy, but the production is playful and humorous in nature.  The audience is invited to go through this euphoria with Andrew, and disregard the mundane details of his life – to have the episode with him, as it were.

Gunn says; “Mania generally only appears in the media alongside tragedy, which doesn’t really help us identify or understand how it starts.  So I wanted to show the human side behind mania, the arc and kind of internal logic that leads people to do really questionable things.”

“It’s really not a well-understood condition.  I didn’t know what I was experiencing when my own mania started to build, which is kind of a testament to this fact.  It’s quite weird – as some of my friends put it, it was like I was tenfold myself – a dangerously positive version of me.  You feel more on to it than you have ever been, even if the reality points to the opposite.”

POTATO STAMP addresses the fact that contemporary culture does not have a way to understand these kind of experiences, except as a kind of pathology.  They hence become very difficult to integrate into our lives. 

“I feel… mania often begins as a search for deeper meaning in one’s life, a search for meaning that should be fostered… I remember feeling like – should I be going to a doctor or a priest?”

Gunn hasn’t had another episode since, making it a particularly odd experience to understand. 

The question of medication is also raised.  Bipolar disorder is an unusual mental illness in that many believe the mania is valuable to them, and choose not to medicate.

The duo Joseph Harper and Christopher Stratton (I am a Cat, Honey, The Boy and the Bicycle) are acting as dramaturge and performance designer for the show.

Fans of electronic music and jazz will enjoy the show for its fun, eclectic score by Tom Dennison.  In line with the show’s title, a purpose-built instrument made out of potatoes is used to control the music in the show! 

The logo of the show is also made from potato stamps.

GOD-BELLY was highly commended for Playmarket’s Playwrights B4 25 Competition.

Responses to GOD-BELLY:
“…inventive stagecraft…subtle comedy and mesmerizing insight.” (Rennee Gerlich, The Big Idea) 
“an eclectic and innovative show…pushes the boundaries of form” (Cherie Moore, Theatreview)

Show details:
Venue: 19 Tory St, Central Wellington 
Season: Tuesday 23 – Sat 27 Feb, 2016  
Time: 8.30 
Booking info: Koha entry, RSVP to pressure.point.collective@gmail.com 

Website: www.facebook.com/pressurepointcollective  

After a season at the NZ Fringe Festival, where they were nominated for “Most Promising Emerging Company”, Pressure Point is bringing the show to Auckland’s Basement Theatre in June.  

Responses to the NZ Fringe season:

“…stealthily becomes more and more compelling until I’m at the final scenes, unwilling to look away. Strange and wonderful.” – Wellingtonista

“Gunn plays everyone…switching between their distinctive rhythms and postures with an absolutely mesmerizing lightning speed.” – Theatreview

The Basement Theatre
7 – 18 June 2016, 6.30pm
Bookings: http://www.basementtheatre.co.nz/
Ph. iTicket 09 361 1000 



Theatre , Solo ,


Drink the Kool-aid

Review by Nathan Joe 11th Jun 2016

The best theatre is full of surprises. Not cheap or outlandish plot twists, but the organic sort of surprises that feel like the missing pieces of a puzzle. The sort of surprises that leave audiences smiling in awe. Andrew Gunn’s Potato Stamp Megalomaniac digs these out in spades.

Andrew tells us to think of the show as a revolution rather than a play. And that’s exactly what it is. What could be a straightforward monologue about a manic episode is turned into a collective tour through a pivotal moment in his life, with Andrew himself playing multiple friends, flatmates and figures, switching roles with breakneck speed and clarity. [More]  

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Fervent philosophical conversations on existential revolution blend with inquiry into clinical hypomania

Review by Nik Smythe 08th Jun 2016

The first thing we’re told in Potato Stamp Megalomaniac is that we’re not here to watch a play; we are here to take part in a revolution.  We are told this by a tall warrior-like shaman clad in strikingly stylised armour composed of corrugated cardboard and gaffer tape, so it feels prudent to believe it.  Potential upheavals of language and cultural norms aside, what ensues is a performance that it is impossible not to engage with on some or many levels, not least directly. 

The tremendously versatile Basement Studio space is transformed by ‘performance designer’ Christine Urquhart’s ubiquitous set, running in traverse through the centre with raised stage areas at each end.  One of these houses the technical base of operations, comprising a mixing desk, laptop and an intriguing one-by-half metre homemade electronic circuit board mounted on clear perspex.

The entire floor, as well as the walls and ceiling above the performance area, are covered with white and brown paper, plus there’s an overhead projector and a one-by-two meter box of dark soil in the centre.  So it’s apparent even before the pointy-helmeted robot wizard man in the striped undies comes on and encourages us to let go of our preconceptions that this theatrical experience will be original, if nothing else.

Written and performed by young Wellingtonian Andrew Gunn, based on his experience during the final year of his B.A. at Victoria University, the narrative involves the development of his proposal for the editorship of Vic’s student mag, Salient; a process which fuels his increasingly radical ideas about language and connections between people and all things.

These carry over into his home life, straining relations with his flatmates as he treats their space and personal belongings with increased impropriety, in accordance with his belief that materialism is at the core of humanity’s disconnection from the universe.  The verbose conceptual raves that permeate Gunn’s account highlight his clear intelligence, and his determination to transcend the status quo at a profound level. 

The potato stamps themselves symbolise a form of art and communication that can never be reproduced exactly due to their tendency to decompose.  Gunn evidently chooses to embrace this entropy, striving to continually reinvent language so as to free humanity from our oppressive inhibitions or some such noble quest.  It seems ultimately impossible to harness control of something so resolutely transient and unmeasurable. 

Portraying the majority of characters himself with cursory distinctions, Gunn holds conversations in real time between himself and one or several persons with skilful vocal clarity.  Developed with assistance from dramaturgs Nisha Madhan and Stella Reid, the play’s structure doesn’t entirely forgo convention or material cohesion, but it definitely stretches the boundaries, blending fervently philosophical conversations on existential revolution with an inquiry into clinical hypomania. 

Unassuming genius operator and sound designer Tom Dennison’s indispensable contribution cannot be understated, tacitly pottering away at his home-made nerve centre to operate Ronnie Livingstone and Ruby Reihana Wilson‘s lighting design, and underpinning Gunn’s performance with his intensely tonal and rhythmic electronic score.

Gunn plays in his dirt box, demonstrates his potato stamp prowess and reimagines discussions using shadow puppets on the projector; he dangles upside down to sing songs and ultimately gets every single person in the room physically involved. Aspects of the production seem arbitrary or at least their significance is not clearly apparent, which could arguably support the overall message that he has something to offer us that can only be explained to a point, beyond which it must be simply accepted and experienced. 

One does wonder how much Gunn still holds to the philosophies he expounds as devised in the grip of a manic episode – the earnest emphasis he delivers it with certainly rings with the truth of someone who believes what they’re saying.  Does he still yearn for the pure enlightenment implicit in his call to destroy our domineering cultural mores, or has he made peace with the existential conundrum babbling just below all our surfaces? 

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Welcome insight into an alien experience

Review by Shannon Friday 26th Feb 2016

Potato Stamp Megalomaniac focuses on the great feeling at the start of a manic episode, and how this different way of thinking could be a key to… something … A spiritual transformation, or enlightenment, maybe!  

Andrew Gunn is our performer.  To an impressively grandiose modern classic electronics score straight from Einstein on the Beach (played on a potato-based instrument by Tom Dennison), he enters on swappa-crate stilts, looking like cardboard luchador version of Pyramid Head from Silent Hill.  We are duly informed by this latter-day, self-proclaimed prophet that we are here “not for an act of theatre, but for a ritual… For a consciousness revolution!”  It’s very strange.

A quick word about the setup: Potato Stamp Megalomaniac is staged in a reverse version of theatre in the round.  The audience are on rugs and cushions toward the centre of the space, and the action plays out in stages around the sides and in the aisles criss-crossing the venue. 

This choice is bloody genius.  17 Tory struggles with any sort of conventional staging – the sightlines and acoustics are just too difficult – but here the audience arrangement fantastically backs up the experience of mania.  There’s a restlessness to the whole thing.  Not only are we encouraged to move around to keep in contact with the performance, but we have to. 

Immediately after we meet the prophet, Andrew becomes a student version of himself.  He paces all around the outside of the room.    His thoughts circle as urgently as he does, and we are constantly adjusting to follow him physically, just as we’re constantly struggling to keep the thread of his rather grand theories of life, language, enlightens, and the typeface of VUW’s student newspaper, Salient.  It’s a mind-blowingly cool match of form and content. 

Throughout the evening, we’re constantly bouncing back and forth between watching Andrew try to implement his (unfinished) ideas, joining him in discussion of those ideas, and watching the people around him try to understand his erratic behaviour.

It’s from his attempts to implement his ideas that we get the title of the show.  Andrew’s chosen devices for re-imagining language are potato stamps.  While carving out a stamp, he explains that from the moment a stamp is carved, it starts to decay, making each and every stamp mark unique.  It’s a call to resist the industrializing effects of typeface and grammar.

Having lived with several people who have experienced manic episodes or even manic breaks, the glimpses of the people around Andrew are very welcome.  Gunn plays everyone, from his co-editor, psychiatrist and Religion professor to his flatmates, switching between their distinctive rhythms and postures with an absolutely mesmerizing lightning speed. Andrew’s co-editor at Salient, who thrives on borrowing his energy and encourages creativity, shows how infectious and stimulating it can be to have a partner on the way up, as he does push-ups in the living room. 

His flatmates, however, are having a harder time, and are eager for Andrew to come back down, trying to convince him to see how his behaviour is impacting them.  It would be incredibly tempting to send up these voices as disrupting Andrew’s high, but when Gunn performs them, he settles into each voice earnestly.  It’s a much appreciated counterpoint to the overwhelming enthusiasm elsewhere. 

There’s a long section where Andrew engages the room in a conversation about how our use of language limits our thought.  It is counterpoised with a visit to a somewhat disinterested psychiatrist, who is reluctant to treat Andrew’s sleeplessness without a look at his larger behaviours and symptoms.  The juxtaposition of these two sections finally starts to draw together how all of the ideas can be building to the same point: our quickness to label something abnormal as dangerous or unsafe, rather than try to mine the experience for meaning. 

And yet… I’m not quite convinced.  This may be my personal experience or not, I honestly can’t tell even two days after the show if I’m being fair to it or not.  But in that big conversation about grammar and how it influences /limits /separates thoughts, there’s a distinct sense of competition between audience and Andrew; it’s a little too much fun to score a mental point or get something clever over him to buy into his theories completely. 

It makes the transition to the call to action somewhat forced and jarring.  As we take to the streets, I’m going along more out of a desire not to poop out than because I’m convinced we should have a consciousness revolution.  And I’ve had experiences of ecstasy, which I am very glad to seek out.  I feel like I’ve missed something as we march silently to the waterfront, potatoes in hand. 

The genius of this show – much like Godbelly before it – is to show behaviour on balance and let us understand an alien experience deeper.  There’s some much appreciated insight, and many perspectives are presented without judgement.  I’m just not sure I’ve made the leap to wanting to join in.  

Comments

Andrew Gunn February 26th, 2016

Hi Shannon,

Thanks so much for the balanced review.  

Just a heads up, Hadleigh and I were never editors of Salient - we entertained a grandiose fantasy,
and were intending to pitch for the 2013 editorship, but we decided not to for several reasons, some
of which are evident in the play!

I can see how this might not be overly apparent, though.


Cheers again,

Andrew Gunn
Pressure Point


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