Schools
Outdoor Performance At Perimeter College Highlights Safety, Social Justice Issues
Linsday Bytof is lecturer of theatre at Perimeter and "The Garden Cycle" production manager.
October 15, 2021
DECATUR, Ga.βLive theatre returns to Perimeter College at Georgia State University this fallβwith a twist.
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The Theatre Arts Guild will present its production of βThe Garden Cycleβ outdoors Friday-Sunday, Oct. 22-24 at the Native Plant Botanical Garden located on Perimeterβs Decatur Campus, 3251 Panthersville Road.
The alfresco performance is billed as an immersive experience of theatre and song and will feature excerpts from four plays that prompt guests to meander through the garden as the scenes change.
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Sally Robertson, Perimeterβs Fine Arts Department chair, says the ongoing pandemic and safety considerations meant re-thinking how to do theater.
βNobody really wanted to do another Zoom show,β Roberston said, adding that decisions about this fallβs production started in February.
βThe idea for the garden came out of us not knowing exactly where weβd be with COVID and indoor venue protocols, so we thought, letβs just try something different,β she said.
Robertson said considerable thought also went into the performanceβs theme which focuses on grief, growth, change and joy through life experiences.
βWe said, letβs do it outdoors and letβs really focus on creatives from the communities of Black, Indigenous and People of Color in theatre,β Robertson said.
βWe are acutely aware of social justice initiatives that had been brought up in the 2020 Black Lives Matter movement and the LGBTQ movementβall of these things were really coming to a head last summer and theater had to sit up and take notice.β
βThe Garden Cycleβ will address social and personal issues during a one-hour performance that highlights scenes from βEl Loro, El Gato y El Espiritu Santoβ by Kelly McBurnette-Andronicos, βShakinβ the Mess Outta Miseryβ by Shea Youngblood, βHarina Panβ by Sofia Palmero and βMe No Choose None: Stories of Anansiβ by Aaron Gotlieb, theatre staff member at Perimeter.
Linsday Bytof is lecturer of theatre at Perimeter and βThe Garden Cycleβ production manager.
βWeβve all felt very distant and disconnected,β Bytof says. βWe talked about the idea that people have been cozily at home on their couch, watching Netflix for the last year.
βI feel like for all of us to be walking around the gardens together will be a really cool feeling, and make us feel even closer, somehow, than if we were in a theatreβand yet still be distanced and safe,β she said.
While the play is free, donations at the gate are encouraged and reservations must be made in advance at tag.tix.com. Tickets are extremely limited, and the audience should be prepared to walk around the garden to see each short play. Performances are Friday and Saturday, Oct. 22-23 at 6 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 24 at 3 p.m. at the Native Plant Botanical Garden. A plant sale will take place one hour before each performance, with guests invited to βBring Your Own Picnic.β
This press release was produced by Perimeter College. The views expressed are the author's own.