Η μαμά ενός επτάχρονου κοριτσιού κάνει απόπειρα αυτοκτονίας. Το κοριτσάκι ξεκινάει μια λίστα με όλα τα υπέροχα πράγματα για τα οποία αξίζει να ζεις... Ενήλικας πια, έρχεται να μας διηγηθεί την ιστορία της. Και την ιστορία της Λίστας. Γιατί, όσο περνάνε τα χρόνια, η Λίστα μεγαλώνει... Το "Όλα αυτά τα υπέροχα πράγματα" είναι ένα έργο τρυφερό, ξεκαρδιστικό, συγκινητικό και γεμάτο αισιοδοξία. Ένα έργο-αγκαλιά, που φτιάχνεται κάθε βράδυ ξανά από τον/την ηθοποιό και το κοινό μαζί. Καθένας από εμάς έχει την ανάγκη να ακούσει όλα αυτά τα υπέροχα πράγματα, να (ξανα)βρει τις μικρές χαρές της ζωής, αυτές που τελικά... είναι και οι πιο μεγάλες. Ειδικά σήμερα. Ειδικά εδώ.
If you live a long life and get to the end of it without ever once having felt crushingly depressed, then you probably haven’t been paying attention. Every Brilliant Thing ~~ Duncan Macmillan
BRILLIANT ... this certainly describes Duncan Macmillan's Every Brilliant Thing. This is one of a handful of scripts that has made me cry while reading it. Not because I found it to be sad, but because it made me feel so fucking good.
At its core, theatre is meant to be a communal experience. At its best, theatre should act as a tonic that reminds us we're all in this together, and none of us are alone. I'm not talking about kumbayas and group hugs; I'm talking about something real.
In Every Brilliant Thing, writers Duncan Macmillan and Jonny Donahoe's audience-interactive play the audience is very much on the hook as they are called upon to play bit parts, shout out lines, and ~~ for one audience member ~~ remove their sock and fashion it into a sock puppet. Every Brilliant Thing is truly that communal experience.
Every Brilliant Thing is a play about depression and suicide designed to make us feel better ~~ not about dying, but about living. The title refers to a list of everything that makes life worth living. The Narrator starts it as a seven-year-old child after his mother’s first suicide attempt and continues with some interruptions throughout the ups and downs of his own life.
The Narrator is written so warm and engagingly, we easily believe he’s telling his own story. We first meet him as he wanders thru the audience prior to curtain; during this time he gauges the audience. He then gives selected audience members an object with a number and description on it. He asks the audience member to read the description when he calls out the number during the show.
The numbers called out refer to items on the list, beginning with #1, ice cream. As they go up, the audience participation not only contributes to the storytelling, it also builds a sense of community. Several people are called upon to take part in brief scenes, portraying the Narrator’s father, a veterinarian, a guidance counselor, a favorite author, his girlfriend, then wife, among others. As written by Macmillan, the narrator guides them nicely but allows for improvisation, which can lead to some amusing and touching theatre.
The Narrator doesn’t shy away from painful experiences but often puts a slightly humorous or self-aware spin on those experiences. An early story about having to have his dog, Sherlock Bones, put to sleep ~~ with a jacket as the pup and an audience member as the vet ~~ sets the tone, especially when the vet can’t tell one part of the dog from another.
While the growing list ranges from simple ~~ getting to stay up late and watch tv; to profoundly silly ~~ feeling comfortable enough with someone to ask them if you have broccoli in your teeth ~~ many of the incidents are very poignant. The child’s efforts to cheer up his mother are rebuffed. His relationship with his taciturn father is problematic. His romance follows the course of many romances, but his marriage becomes troubled, plagued it seems by his own depression, though it’s not too explicitly spelled out.
And yet, as the Narrator leaves the stage, we are left with a tremendous sense of joy the journey that lies ahead of him ...
This was a re-read for me, after seeing the 'brilliant' HBO production, starring the incomparable Jonny Donahue. I wanted to revisit the text as it provides some nice footnotes detailing things which have happened in production that are not necessarily 'following the script'. Still one of the most fascinating 'audience participation' pieces I've ever read/seen performed ... and I can't praise it highly enough.
Absofuckinglutely brilliant! Normally, I HATE any performance that requires audience interaction/participation, and this is probably the riskiest script I have ever read (since it depends to large extent on the audience members not only being cooperative, but also skilled at taking directions, improvising and being 'in the moment'). I don't envy the actor who is brave enough to undertake this, but would love to see it performed sometime.
HBO filmed it with original star Jonny Donahue and he is incredibly talented:
You know how sometimes you just start crying in the middle of reading something and then like just keep crying for most of the rest of it because the floodgates have opened and what the author is saying is hitting you in just the right way? This happened to me halfway through Every Brilliant Thing.
2021: I got the book today. I wasn't planning on reading it already, but I flipped through some pages and when I realised I had finished it. It's so beautiful and funny and sad.
Oh it's so lovely! If I had a list of every brilliant thing, this would for sure be on it :)
There's a performance on HBO if you want to see!
I bought some modern plays and a collected set of Duncan MacMillan popped up on Amazon. I hadn't heard of him but many of his other plays had already been recommended to me so I thought, yeah sure why not! I mean what's a play that's so bad you can't read it? Titus Andronicus is one of the worst plays I can think of and I read that, haha! And how likely is it that a guy who has a "collected plays" with, what I imagine is a good publisher, can't write? You know? Whatever.
Anyway the book (the collected plays I mean) has turned out to be a total treat :) It totally mirrors my own concerns and the types of messages I want to hear. If I could sum up the messages gathered from the plays I read in it so far they are "The planet is dying, there are many evil people here but also, though I don't know why, don't kill yourself." I suppose that tells you more about me than the plays to be honest!
I don't think anyone knows why life has to be so difficult but it's nice and enough sometimes just to acknowledge that it is. And the audience participation of the play really embodies how connectedness can become an antidote to depression, and for once does something that only a play can do! Every other play I'm like, "I'll just read it or wait until there's a film of it" hahaha
After an audition a week ago, I learned today that I have been cast to be the narrator in this one actor play, put on by the Bowdoin theater department this spring. I was surprised to get the part, but could not be more excited to work with such a rich piece of writing. The play has a fixed general structure with improvised scenes throughout, incorporating audience engagement. I will get to tell stories about my (the narrator’s) life, using audience members as scene partners to recount childhood memories. The play is happy, sad, funny, and everything in between, keeping you on your toes. Extremely wholesome, to say the least. I cannot wait to get started and look forward to continuing my aesthetic education.
Brilliant Things: 1. Acting 2. Senior Fall 3. Clean Sheets 4. Banana w/Nutella 5. Liberal Arts!
I saw this on stage yesterday starring the incomparable John O'Hurley of Seinfeld/Mr. Peterman fame. Mr. O'Hurley is no doubt on the uplifting list of life's brilliant things. Tragically, there's an alternate list that's just as long, that's not uplifting at all.
Είχα χρόνια να πάω σε θεατρική παράσταση και στο τέλος αυτής να δω θεατές δακρυσμένους. Η Ελένη Ράντου έχει πάρει το ομώνυμο έργο και το έχει απογειώσει. Από τότε που είδα την παράσταση έψαχνα το πρωτότυπο κείμενο. Ένα βιβλιαράκι 50 σελίδων που όταν τελείωσα απορούσα πώς δεν είναι ευρέως γνωστό. Αφηγήτρια ένα κορίτσι που μας εξιστορεί την ζωή του απο την ηλικία των 7 ετών ως την ενηλικίωση της. Το κορίτσι βιώνει τις απόπειρες αυτοκτονίες της μητέρας της και για να προστατευτεί αρχίζει να συντάσσει μια λίστα με όλα τα απλα πράγματα στην ζωή για τα οποία αξίζει κανένας να ζει. Η μικρή ενηλικιώνεται όπως και η λίστα της και μέσα από αυτην την ενηλικίωση μεγαλώνουμε και μαθαίνουμε και εμείς. Αλήθεια τι μας κάνει ευτυχισμένους; Ένα παγωτό χωνάκι, η μυρωδιά των μωρών, να κάνεις μπάνιο στην θάλασσα γυμνός, να ακούς τον Kurt Cobain να τραγουδάει " the man who sold the world ", ένα βράδυ Τετάρτης με φίλους, πίτσες και champion league; Η επιλογή ποικίλλει ανάλογα τα άτομα, το φύλο, την ηλικία και αυτό λίγη σημασία έχει. Η ιστορία, τα μηνύματα και ο τρόπος που μας δίνονται με συγκίνησε βαθιά ,όμως εδώ οφείλω να πω ότι η Ράντου -που δεν της το είχα καθόλου- μέσα απο την προσθήκη προσωπικών βιωμάτων λόγω της ιστορίας με τη μητέρα της, έχει πάει την ιστορία και τη ...."λίστα των πραγμάτων που αξίζει να ζεις" σε άλλο επίπεδο. Δεν έχω λόγια ούτε για την παράσταση ούτε για το αρχικό κείμενο.
Υγ όταν ακούσαμε τον τελευταίο αριθμό της λίστας στο θέατρο, που είναι διαφορετικός από αυτόν στο αρχικό κείμενο, στερεψαμε από χαρτομάντιλα ....
This is an amazing and important play which is a short one but really effective. It's about a person who starts making a list of "every brilliant thing" in the world to help their mother, who is struggling with sadness/depression.
It's a mix of funny, sad, and very hopeful moments. It talks about serious topics like depression and finding joy in the small things in life. I must say I would like to see the play one day. İt looks amazing.
It has a powerful story that reminds you that even on the hardest days, there are so many brilliant things in the world.
Play #2 this year complete. Gosh that was everything! So many things said in such a short amount of time. It would be so interesting to see this show each night with different audience contributions. I loved reading about how the audience would react differently each night. I can just imagine how it would look onstage and how it would feel to be in the room.
i cried. this was amazing and i wish i could actually see this play live. i would also like to read the whole list if i could. 1 000 001. books/plays/art like this one that simply alter your brain chemistry 1 000 002. the subtle distortion a tear creates on the words of a written page 1 000 003. reading a book front to back in one sitting 1 000 004. sharing reads like this with other people
the other day I was (foolishly) telling someone I don't understand why one would READ a play. I'm such an idiot.this is one of the most beautiful things I've ever read in my entire life
I saw a production of this play and loved it so much I decided I needed a physical copy of the text. The play is a one-person show, with audience members drafted to play additional roles as needed, and the print edition includes lots of footnotes about ways these interactions played out in the initial run, which is a little bit like having the DVD commentary, and which would also be very helpful when staging a production. This is a wonderful story about hope and gratitude and joy (and also sorrow and loss and pain) and I am so glad it made its way into my life.
The saying goes that someone can not truly understand something until it touches their heart and this play helps with that. With actual audience participation, this play places us right in the moment. I wonderful script and idea.
It is theatre at its best. Sensible treatment of an extremely sensitive subject. It touches the core of your heart and compels you to live a full llife.
A child makes a list of all the things worth living for, for his suicidal mother. Didn’t grab me. At the end of the day it was just that: a list of things.
“If you live a long life and get to the end of it without ever once having felt crushingly depressed, then you probably haven’t been paying attention.”
More than a play it is a group therapy session on family and caring. Also, it is how I remembered Some Things Last a Long Time and how I discovered Maureen. So many brilliant things.
This year my goal is to read a play each month. I had seen this on somebody’s list and it sounded interesting, so I wanted it to be my first for the year.
It’s very hard to portray a sense of joy when dealing with such heavy subject matter. But there is something so beautiful about this little story that you cannot help but smile at it.
There is a wonderful recorded performance of this on HBOMAX, so if you don’t want to sit down and read this, I would highly recommend watching it there
Es una obra perfecta. Cuando leo, marco las páginas que más me van gustando doblando la esquina superior de la página y, si ya la había doblado al leer la primera cara pero en la segunda cara también encuentro algo, doblo la inferior. He doblado casi todas las esquinas del libro. Me he reído mucho y me ha roto un poco el corazón. Si dudas si leerlo o no, léelo.