Empathy School & Love Story
Opening Night: April 20, 2016
Closing: May 1, 2016
Theater: Abrons Arts Center Henry Street Settlement
“Empathy School” is performed by Jim Findlay, and co-created with filmmaker and composer Brent Green. An out-of-work bus driver riffs a layered, immersive story on an overnight ride through rural Illinois; rough music, played live by Green, Kate Ryan and Todd Chandler, creaks and throbs; Green’s scratched images flicker by like memories you may not have known you had. “Love Story” is about a disappearing city, two people navigating it, and a fidgety, obsessive follower. The two productions run concurrently.
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April 22, 2016
Because theater is an inherently social form, most plays are date shows — capital-E events that you want to attend with someone else, so you can rehash the pleasures and problems of them afterward. But there are also those rarer plays to which you to want to go solo, works that make you savor the pleasures of being solitary. Take “Empathy School & Love Story,” the writer and director Aaron Landsman’s engaging diptych on varieties of loneliness, which runs through April 30 at the Abrons Arts Center. Made up of two monologues (but of course), it’s an ideal single-ticket show, perfect for pondering on a quiet walk home by yourself, especially on a spring night in Manhattan that draws out those ephemeral human butterflies called New Yorkers. Yes, you’ve been part of an audience for a while, all of you looking at the same people in the same place. But even though the evening’s first offering has us briefly joining hands with the nearest strangers (it only hurts a minute), the production is dedicated to the perspectives of outsiders who never completely connect with anyone else.
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