Toshiki Okada: God Bless Baseball
02/04/2016 - 02/07/2016
8:00 pm - 4:00 pm
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“Okada…reflects contemporary reality and its overstuffed inertia with perfect fidelity.”—Time Out New York
See the quintessentially American game of baseball from a whole new angle. Leading Japanese playwright and director Toshiki Okada explores baseball’s enduring cultural impact on modern Korea and Japan through a family dynamic, with the US as the parent and these Asian countries as brothers living under its sway.
Best known through his acclaimed ensemble chelfitsch, Okada deftly draws on his actors’ own memories of baseball, then expands the narrative to evoke the bittersweet dimensions of East/West international relations and baseball’s use as a tool for American cultural propaganda and control. God Bless Baseball employs the left-field humor, colloquial dialogue, and quirky physical language that have become Okada’s trademark and features a set by acclaimed artist Tadasu Takamine. The result is a witty, poignant, and unexpected look at the symbolic power of the American game.
Admission is $20 to the public, $17 for WexMembers, and $10 for students.
To order tickets, look here.
Performed in Japanese and Korean with English subtitles
Toshiki Okada God Bless Baseball US tour is supported by the Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan, in the fiscal year 2015; Tokyo Metropolitan Government; The Japan Foundation through the Performing Arts JAPAN Program; and the Asian Cultural Council.
God Bless Baseball is commissioned by Asian Culture Complex – Asian Arts Theatre and coproduced by Asian Culture Complex – Asian Arts Theatre, Festival Tokyo, and Taipei Arts Festival. Additional commissioning support provided by FringeArts, Philadelphia; Japan Society, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; The Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center at the University of Maryland; and Wexner Center for the Arts at The Ohio State University. Research and workshop support provided by Doosan Art Center, Seoul. Residencies held at Kinosaki International Arts Center and Steep Slope Studio, Yokohama.