Jump to content

Manual Cinema
Mementos Mori

Images

Manual Cinema, Lula del Ray

Photo: Jerry Shulman

Their works completely reenchant me with the moving image.

—Chicago Reader

Presented as part of the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival

This endlessly inventive group of Chicago artists uses disarmingly simple tools—live music, paper puppets, overhead projectors—to tell transformative stories. Their enchanting works unsettle the boundaries between cinema and theater.

With Mementos Mori, their new feature-length performance of cinematic shadow puppetry, they offer a beguiling meditation on how digital culture is changing our relationship to death and dying. Shadow puppets interact with live actors in silhouette, while a chamber ensemble and video complete the immersive multimedia experience, imbuing the experience of attending a movie with a live theatrical immediacy.

Mementos Mori weaves together three interrelated stories about death and technology. When Death takes an unexpected holiday, an elderly film projectionist finds a new lease on life; a ghost explores the afterlife with her iPhone; and a seven-year-old girl discovers her own mortality.

Manual Cinema developed Mementos Mori in part through the MCA Stage New Works Initiative, which provides commissioning support and a production design residency. The New Works Initiative was established in 2014 and meaningfully expands MCA Stage's ongoing commitment to supporting artists and bringing important new performances to our audiences.

Running time: 90 minutes

Manual Cinema Mementos Mori video still

Video

On a dark stage, technicians use overhead projectors to cast ta woman's silhouette onto an image of a sunset that appears in the background.

Manual Cinema, Lula del Ray

Photo: Jerry Shulman

Artists Up Close

  • MCA Studio: Manual Cinema, Open Doors
  • WED, JAN 14, 2–4 pm

Museum visitors are invited to quietly come and go from the theater to observe the artists working on the production.

  • MCA Talk
  • THU, JAN 15, postshow

Audience members are invited to stay at the end of the performance for a conversation with the artists, moderated by Peter Taub.

About the Artists

The multidisciplinary ensemble members of Manual Cinema combine their varied backgrounds in theater, visual arts, and music. Five Chicago artists formed Manual Cinema in 2010, using handmade shadow puppetry, cinematic motifs, and live sound manipulation to tell theatrical stories. The company has performed in Chicago at the MCA, Links Hall, and the Hideout, and nationally at the New York International Fringe Festival and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, among others. Manual Cinema has also held residencies and taught at the University of Chicago and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Manual Cinema comprises a visual team—Drew Dir, Sarah Fornace and Julia Miller—and a sound/music team—Ben Kauffman and Kyle Vegter.

Dir has worked as a puppeteer, playwright, and director in Chicago and London. He is the resident dramaturge at Court Theatre and a lecturer at the University of Chicago.

Fornace is a choreographer, performer, and narrative theorist who has performed with Redmoon, Lookingglass Theatre Company, Collaboraction, and Babes with Blades. She teaches movement at Columbia College Chicago.

An artist, musician, and producer, Kauffman works at Engine Studios and performs live in venues across Chicago. Miller is a director, performer, puppeteer, choreographer, and graphic designer who curates puppet cabaret at Links Hall and is a member of Blair Thomas & Co.

Vegter is a sound artist, multi-instrumentalist, and producer. A composer of new electronic art music, he is a member of the experimental sound collective oh+ah. Learn more about Manual Cinema.

Four technicians use overhead projectors to cast the silhouette of a puppet onto a large screen in the background.

Performance view, Manual Cinema's Mementos Mori, January 14, 2015

Photo: Nathan Keay, © MCA Chicago
Technicians use overhead projectors to cast a street scene onto three large screens in the background.

Performance view, Manual Cinema, Mementos Mori, January 14, 2015

Photo: Nathan Keay, © MCA Chicago

Downloads

Funding

Manual Cinema: Mementos Mori was developed in part through the MCA Stage New Works Initiative, with lead support from Elizabeth A. Liebman. The MCA Stage presentation is generously supported by Lois and Steve Eisen and the Eisen Family Foundation.