CENTREFOLD / Two fat ladies .. or are they?: Eyes down for virtual-reality bingo

Clare Bayley
Monday 30 May 1994 18:02 EDT
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'We're looking for genuine excitement where the audience feels something that is not predictable,' explains James Yarker of Stan's Cafe. The random element in Bingo in the House of Babel comes, appropriately enough, in the form of an old bingo machine, borrowed from the British Legion. A previous production, Alice through the System, used the element of real time - the show finished after a certain number of minutes whether or not the actors had come to the end of the script. It presented a Kafkaesque nightmare of somebody trying to claim unemployment benefit, with the tension raised by sending the performers out of the theatre to buy things for the audience - a packet of cigarettes, a bag of crisps. The further away the shop, the less likely it was that there would be time to finish the show.

'I'm still interested in ways in which the imaginative side of theatre brushes up against reality,' says Yarker. In Bingo, three librarians suspect that they are not human at all, but robots, and so embark on a scientific test of their emotions, memories and reflexes. 'Their journey leads them to a bingo-machine which turns itself on and with each number called, randomly echoes back a saying in a God-like voice which refers to one of the three characters.'

Virtual reality is also a feature of the show, though of a low-tech kind. The performers find some old breakfast cereal boxes which, on their heads, lead them into a strange and beautiful virtual world which the audience can't see. It creates a reverse dramatic irony on stage, with performers thinking they're feeding handfuls of grass to a cow and the audience seeing them feeding a bit of crumpled up paper to a chair. 'Theatre is about creating virtual reality in a way,' claims Yarker. 'It's about creating a 3-D world on stage, with a certain interaction between the performers and the audience. In virtual reality, audience intervention is only available if somebody's programmed it in.'

BAC, 176 Lavender Hill, SW11 (071-223 2223) to 19 June

(Photograph omitted)

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