July 2019. An afternoon in early summer, just after the fiftieth anniversary of the Stonewall Riots. There is a slight cooling in the air after dark that speaks of possibilities.

Lights up: a spotlight on the page of Jaclyn Pryor’s Future Perfect. May 2015.

DRAG QUEEN
Historical document, digital trace. A blurb from Pig Iron’s website in which they describe I Promised Myself to Live Faster as “an intergalactic gay extravaganza featuring closeted extraterrestrials, high-stakes pursuits, and nuns from outer space. […] A twisty tale of mayhem and allegorical ridiculousness, Pig Iron Theatre Company sets out to draw, with hot colored markers, a spiritual link between the hairy-chested drag queen Martha Graham Cracker […] and Charles Ludlam.” The year is 2015. The month is May. The place is FringeArts.

Let us linger in 2015 for this moment, the time in which this performance exists and existed. It is the setting for this internal memory play in which the performer’s memory is not shared. We are following HE, who is perhaps sitting with us in the audience. We are in his skin as we participate in the ultimate example of “placing the private in public,” as Pryor writes. The stage directions here describe the future, what will come to pass, and what has already passed for these characters between the time of the play’s setting and the time of the play’s writing. Stage directions more often reveal the past and present of a given character, but they can also venture into the realm of the present. Here, the stage directions spend more time in the future than the past, easily shifting through queer temporality by donning parentheses.

(And what of the parentheticals? These are past pasts, moments configured as past (and passed) even to the characters in 2015. This is the pertinent past that passes through the future HE as the future and past connect to form the pieces of a more complete narrative. Future perfects and past imperfects merged together by the now past, but at one time, present, HE in October 2019.)

The DRAG QUEEN continues to sing, ignorant of the play taking place in the audience, or removed from the audience. It is still May 2015. As we read about what HE is thinking and has experienced, we relive – or, in point of fact, experience for the first time – what this one particular performance means for someone else. HE, and WE, share an embodied mind for the short space of the DRAG QUEEN’s song.

DRAG QUEEN
Living faster starts now
But it has also already started
And will continue to begin.
I promise myself –

 

To live faster/
To have lived faster/
To be living faster/
Tolivefaster.

 

Blackout.

About the Author

Bess Rowen is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor of Theatre at Villanova University. She recently completed her PhD in Theatre and Performance at The Graduate Center, CUNY. Her work focuses on what she terms "affective stage directions," which are stage directions written in ways that engage the physical and emotional responses of future theatre makers. While at CUNY, she was the recipient of the Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship in Public Humanities as well as a Graduate Center Dissertation Fellowship. Her article “Undigested Reading: Rethinking Stage Directions Through Affect” can be found in the September 2018 volume of Theatre Journal, which was also covered in Episode 27 of "On TAP: A Theatre & Performance Studies Podcast." Other articles can be found in The Eugene O'Neill Review, The Tennessee Williams Annual Review, and Emerging Theatre Research. Her avid interests include stage directions, theories of gender & sexuality, female playwrights, Irish theatre, and theatrical riots.