
I’ve felt theater overwhelm me before, but until last Tuesday, I’ve never felt it pass through me.
#Sleep no more buy tickets full#
I’d recommend a quick skim of Macbeth if you’re really interested in the whodunit aspect full enjoyment of the atmospherics, though, requires no cramming whatsoever. (If you’re interested in a strong story, though, I’d recommend you follow a specific actor, especially when someone plunges out of a room with purpose.) But this is the nonsense math of nightmares, a perfect Chinese box that invites you to look for solutions that seem designed, never to come fully into focus.

Upon reflection, though, I don’t think there’s a right or wrong way. “Did I do it right?” I wondered afterward, having realized I’d missed half the plot points my fellow travelers had stumbled upon - and they’d, in turn, missed half the things I’d seen. The amateur cryptographers of Lost will be be similarly pleased, as will the Escherheads who fetishized Inception. The show’s influences spider far beyond the Bard and Hitch: Players of puzzle-horror first person video games like BioShock will find the Sleep experience highly gratifying (and the notion of becoming a camera highly familiar). “If it’s all too much,” a docent tells you at the beginning, “there’s always the bar.” I made use of it. (Maxine Doyle’s wall-crawling choreography - two parts parkour to one part The Fly - helps the actors doff their humanity with ease their sexuality, however, remains fixatingly intact.) And then there’s Macbeth himself, conjuring the Weird Sisters in a strobe-lit demon disco. The presumed Lady Macbeth herself is poised above her bloody bathtub, or climbing a mountain of antique furniture like a rabid ape. Danvers from Hitchcock’s Rebecca - here in loyal service to Lady Macbeth - spooning milky poison down the gullet of a soused, super-pregnant woman who very well might be Lady Macduff. A gelid blonde who may or may not be Mrs. And all the while, you’re carried on perfectly modulated aural swells of Bernard Herrmann pastiche, courtesy of sound designer Stephen Dobbie.Īlong the way, you’re guaranteed to stumble on what Punchdrunk’s directors, designers, and choreographers (Felix Barrett, Maxine Doyle, Livi Vaughan, and Beatrice Minns) refer to as “situations”: a man who may or may not be Duncan, right king of Scotland, being murdered in a sheikh’s tent.

(N.B.: This doesn’t exempt you from actor contact - in fact, you’re practically guaranteed to be interfered with at some point in the approximately three hours it takes to survey the space and absorb the long arc of the story.) Fending for yourself in the fictional “McKittrick Hotel” (a pointed Vertigo reference that dizzy or claustrophobic types should take to heart before booking), you’re given the run of six misty, intricately detailed floors, with more than 100 rooms full of (and this is a partial list) clues, red herrings, hair samples, teeth scattered like gaming dice, magic spells, animal bones in carefully labeled bins, a mass of old-fashioned desk fans that turn on and off at random, rotary-dial phones that have actual dial tones, grisly private eye photos of corpses, bloodstains that appear and disappear, patchy ad hoc taxidermy posed for maximal menace, and a ballroom stalked by moving trees. You and your fellow voyeurs, enskulled in your morbid headgear, quickly become part of the creepy scenery. Presented with a bone-white Venetian beak mask (the kind favored by plague doctors in the Renaissance), you’re invited to gawk, shame-free, at whatever you see, to rifle through drawers, files, Rolodexes, and even coffins. (Also: ’tis sold-out, but set to extend, so get your trigger finger ready.) The UK’s Punchdrunk theater collective - famed for these sorts of immersive, site-specific experiments back on their native sod - has finally brought Sleep to the city that never does, and now, most certainly, won’t: The show infects your dreams. What in Hecate’s name is Sleep No More? A dance-theater horror show? A wordless, nonlinear mash-up of Macbeth and the darker psychosexual corners of Hitchcock? A six-story Jazz Age haunted house for grown-ups and anyone who’s ever entertained sick cineast-y fantasies of living inside a Kubrick movie? ’Tis all these, and more besides: a deed without a name, to quote an infernal authority. The Modelo Ticket Fight Night, presented by Macho Self Storage returns to The Factory in Deep Ellum on Thursday, August 31st! 💪🏼ĭoors open at 3:00 pm, and the first fight starts at 5:00,Īs the P1s find their inner Rocky and slug it out inside the friendly, air-conditioned confines of The Factory.Mon-Sat, 7pm, 7:15pm, 7:30pm, 7:45pm, 8pm įri-Sat, 11pm, 11:15pm, 11:30pm, 11:45pm, midnight
