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March 1, 2015

When I was first told to leave the theater during the beginning of Hitting Bedrock, I grinned, thinking I’d misheard. A repeated request, however, was hard and clear enough to let me know that this was no joke. That demand was soon made of everyone in the audience, and within a few minutes we were shepherded out of our seats and downstairs into a basement passageway, then relocated to another shadowy space, all while carrying our belongings in bags. This experimental docuplay at La MaMa, which relates stories of Ukrainian war refugees, loses power the longer it goes on. Yet those early moments effectively mimic the confusion felt by people caught in war’s upheaval. Hitting Bedrock, conceived and directed by Virlana Tkacz, started out as a relatively benign project. In 2013, the Yara Arts Group traveled to Donetsk, Ukraine, for a theater program that asked residents to describe their dreams for the future. It seemed an interesting question to pose to those who live in an unassuming town known primarily for mining (hence the play’s title), and many were eager to participate.

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