Balloonacy

Raleigh Little Theatre

Saturday, Nov. 7โ€“Sunday, Nov. 15, various times,ย  $12โ€“$17


Vaudeville star and early film comedian W.C. Fields famously gave fellow actors a grouchy admonition: Never work with animals or children. ย 

But what if your scene partner is a balloon?ย 

Thatโ€™s the challenge facing actor Kevin Roberge and director Jesse Gephart with Balloonacy, a play that opens this weekend at the Raleigh Rose Gardenโ€™s outdoor Stephenson Amphitheatre. The novel production is Raleigh Little Theatreโ€™s first show before a live audience in eight months.

In playwright Barry Kornhauserโ€™s wordless script, an old man finds his solitude interrupted when a red balloon floats into his life through a window. In a bit of magical realism, the floating sphere prods, provokesโ€”and ultimately, befriendsโ€”the curmudgeon. โ€œItโ€™s an instigator,โ€ says Roberge. โ€œItโ€™s making decisions that are affecting me, tormenting me, amusing me.โ€ย 

As a friendship develops between the two, the balloon becomes the second character in what would otherwise be a one-person show.

Though the work was originally written for young audiences, Gephart notes that this story of solitude has taken on a deeper resonance during a pandemic.ย 

In a nod to current conditions, the character takes a mask off when he first enters the house; though he lives alone, we can see that wasnโ€™t always the case. โ€œThereโ€™s a sense of loss and lack of connectivity to other people,โ€ Gephart says. โ€œA lot of us can relate to the idea of being alone just now, and what it means to have the ability to connect again.โ€

Still, how do you give agency, and personality, to a brightly colored bubble?ย 

โ€œI will tell you, itโ€™s a journey,โ€ Roberge says. โ€œEvery performance I learn a little bit more about Redโ€โ€”the name heโ€™s given his silent onstage partnerโ€”โ€œgradually determining what it can do and what it canโ€™t.โ€ย 

In 2017, Roberge and Gephart worked together on another show for RLT featuring unlikely puppets: the millennial musical Avenue Q. โ€œA puppetโ€™s just a material objectโ€”just fleece, foam, or whatever itโ€™s made of,โ€ Roberge says. โ€œA balloonโ€™s an object too. All I really have to do is transfer that same energy to the balloon.โ€

โ€œIf I give this string a tug at just the right moment, it looks like itโ€™s giving me a little tap on the noggin,โ€ Roberge says. โ€œThen you just find more and more of those moments.โ€

โ€œOne of the things I learned from Kevin on Avenue Q was if the performer believes the thing is real, the audience will believe it too,โ€ Gephart says.

Thereโ€™s no shortage of technical concerns when one of a showโ€™s two characters can be blown off-course by a strong breeze. Designer Jenny Mitchell says the design team had to work through a number of balloon considerationsโ€”how big it should be, for example, and what kind of counterweights could anchor it onstage.

The concentration and purity of helium within the balloon is crucial as well; consumer-grade gas available at places like Party City, for example, doesnโ€™t give Red enough buoyancy. โ€œThe mix changes how it handles, and what you can get from it,โ€ Roberge says.ย 

It takes technical ingenuity that the audience never sees to give an inanimate object an economy of expression. But in Balloonacy, Red is a playful, mischievous character who ultimately empathizes with the loneliness of its host.ย 

โ€œItโ€™s like the deus ex machina in the final chapter of this manโ€™s lifeโ€ฆthe thing that restores the life heโ€™s lost to him,โ€ Gephart says. ย 

โ€œI donโ€™t think itโ€™s a one-sided friendship,โ€ Roberge concludes. โ€œAt the end, weโ€™re both better after the journey.โ€ย 


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Bio: Byron Woods is the INDY's theater and dance critic.Email: [email protected]: http://twitter.com/byronwoods