91看片

Skip to Content

91看片 Theater Students Present the "The Secret Paris Project"

Back to News Listing

Author(s)

Greg Glasgow

News  •
The Secret Paris Project

Contemporary queer culture meets underground 1930s Paris nightlife in a 91看片 theater production opening Feb. 12 at the Newman Center for the Performing Arts.

Guest director Clare Hammoor conceived of the production鈥攃alled 鈥淭he Secret Paris Project鈥濃攕everal years ago, after coming across a book of photos by the French-Hungarian photographer known as Brassai. Shot in brothels, opium dens and hidden cafes in the 1930s, they show a Paris where queer culture is celebrated and the transgressive becomes, for a moment, accepted.

鈥淸Brassai is] working in queer clubs, backstage at any number of vaudeville-esque sort of performances. He鈥檚 capturing people out on the street at night鈥攁 lot of caf茅 photos鈥攁nd he takes some photos that are huge for the time,鈥 Hammoor says. 鈥淥ne whole section is on this interracial dance club, which was quite taboo at the time, and he鈥檚 taken these other ones that were really focusing on this queer bar called the Monocle. He鈥檚 not part of the community, and you get a feel for that through the lens, but you also get a real feel for how beautiful these people are and how 鈥榦wning it鈥 they are.鈥

Using the photos as inspiration, Hammoor tasked his cast of nine 91看片 students to create scenes and characters that reflect their views and struggles as young people in a society where queer voices still struggle to be heard, despite their growing presence in popular culture. The show is performed clown-style, with no spoken dialogue and a musical backdrop of 鈥60s French pop.

Cast member Sami Helgeson, whose 鈥渃ountry mouse鈥 character represents 鈥渁 timid outsider who doesn鈥檛 really know what鈥檚 going on and steps into this crazy world,鈥 says the idea of a cast-created show was what drew her to audition for 鈥淭he Secret Paris Project.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a lot of exploration and discussions within the group of, 鈥楾his really spoke to me鈥 and then moving on from there,鈥 she says of the process. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a really good balance of being in drag and having tons of fun and also remembering the struggles that people have to go through in that space as well. We have one scene in the show where there鈥檚 a character discovering who they are in a very vulnerable way, and mirrored against that discovery and the celebration of that is an acknowledgement of pain and suicide rates. We鈥檙e displaying the contrast between the really beautiful aspects of being able to express who you genuinely are and the pain and struggle that comes along with that in society.鈥

The nine clowns of 鈥淪ecret Paris鈥 appear and reappear throughout the night, in various combinations and in a mix of shorter and longer scenes. 鈥淭here isn鈥檛 [the] clear narrative journey that you might expect,鈥 Hammoor says. 鈥淚 phrase it to the cast that it鈥檚 a little more like a poem that you get to experience, rather than a story.鈥

What gives the piece its depth, he says, is the cast members鈥 willingness to be vulnerable and to create scenes that mirror their personal lives.

鈥淗ow that reads in some of the work they鈥檝e created is surprising and really beautiful,鈥 Hammoor says. 鈥淭he cast is a good mix of people, and everyone鈥檚 been really excited to explore. That鈥檚 what I鈥檝e really been pushing. At the end of the day, we鈥檙e doing a show at an education institution, and this is about deepening their own love of the art form and their own practice as an artist, so I want the experience to be about that.鈥

鈥淭he Secret Paris Project鈥 plays Feb. 12鈥16 in the Newman Center鈥檚 Byron Theatre. Tickets are $10. Visit for more information.