Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 21, 2013, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A3
A3 SUNDAY, JULY 21, 2013 NEWS LOCAL
T O those who might find a particular play
at this year's Winnipeg Fringe Theatre
Festival offensive, Fringe executive
producer Chuck McEwen has this advice: It's
called the Fringe Festival for a reason.
" We don't tolerate anything illegal on stage,
or anything that puts the audience at risk,"
McEwen says.
But he adds: " When it comes to the content
of a show, one of the principles of Fringe Festivals
across the country is that artists have
artistic control to create and present their
work on stage.
" Whether or not a show
has artistic merit is left
up to the audience, who
choose whether or not to
attend."
Nevertheless, some
attendees feel Hollywood
Hen Pit , a show put on by
Ian Mozdzen and Doug
Melnyk, goes beyond
what is acceptable even
for such an edgy festival.
In the Fringe Festival
program, Hollywood Hen
Pit advertises itself as a
90- minute show and has
warnings for language
and nudity. But Free
Press reviewer Wendy
King said those warnings
did not capture how far
the show would go. Her
review notes one of the
actors " inserts mayonnaise into his rectum
and then defecates in front of the audience."
" It is... as degrading the third time as it is
the first," the review says.
Terri Stevens, publicist for the Winnipeg
Fringe, said the festival has looked into complaints
brought to their attention by a reviewer
for the CBC.
Stevens said via email the festival had talked
with the performer, who said " the caricatured
fellatio scene is simulated. The show is, however,
extreme in ways."
Stevens said the festival will be " keeping an
eye" on the situation.
Following the CBC complaint, the show's
billing was changed to add an age restriction
so no one under 18 can enter the show, according
to a press release from the festival.
King said she understands the play is satire
and doesn't want to come off as prudish, but
added the problem with the show is partly that
the audience wasn't warned of the graphic
material.
"( The festival) knew so little of the content
of this show that it failed miserably in its responsibility
to warn its patrons of the graphic,
violent sexual exhibitionism and language of
which the show is comprised," she said via
email.
Mozdzen said he realizes the show is not
for everybody, but added he thinks there are
people who would want to see his work.
" There's some audiences that do want to see
what I do, but it's certainly not mainstream or
popular, and I don't mind that," he said.
" Maybe it's really bad, but it doesn't matter
to me. It's just what I do," he said.
Mozdzen said he wanted to perform at the
Fringe specifically because he might not be
able to get his work seen otherwise.
" It's one of the few things we have in our
city, the opportunities to have people see work
that wouldn't be seen if I did it independently,"
he said.
Toning down the show wouldn't work for
Mozdzen, he said.
" We do what we do in the studio room... It's
certainly part of a tradition of body art or
transgressive art or provocative art," he said.
Fringe attendees didn't seem as perturbed
by the play as the two reviewers did.
Robin Kroeger said she hasn't seen the
play, but would not mind seeing it despite the
content.
" I think I would be a little taken aback by it,
but it wouldn't bother me," she said.
McEwen said performing companies write
their own play descriptions and set their own
restrictions, as they are responsible for the
content of the shows, but King believes the
festival should be more active in its overview
of what is presented.
"( It) can cause harm to the other companies
which participate, especially those that want to
push the artistic boundaries of theatre, which
is one of the things creative fringe theatre
should do," King said.
Mozdzen said his performance was as much
for him as for the audience and that the audience
is often not necessary for artistic expressions
like this.
" Sometimes I think it's enough to work on a
piece and no one sees it."
Still, in this case, the fact the show is so
visual made an audience important for him, he
said.
" It's a perspective on the world I don't think
we get to see at all, because it's so terrifying.
But for me, I have a fascination with darkness,"
he said.
Mozdzen said he chose not to read any of the
reviews about his show this year.
" I'm sure it causes a certain amount of conversation,"
he said.
oliver. sachgau@ freepress. mb. ca
TWO Winnipeggers, Ian Mozdzen and
Doug Melnyk, mostly naked, present this
debacle under the guise of - who knows?
Satire? Performance art?
One bangs on a pot and yells through a
megaphone, and the other presents a " confessional"
about his drug- and sex- fuelled
Hollywood " career."
The third time the actor onstage inserts
mayonnaise into his rectum and then defecates
in front of the audience, the shock
wears off. It is, however, as degrading the
third time as it is the first.
Advertised as a 90- minute show, it
mercifully ends at the 70- minute mark.
Winnipeg Fringe Festival organizers
should have their knuckles rapped for
their utter failure to provide adequate
warnings in the program for this show.
The show is listed as mature, with warnings
about language and nudity, when,
in addition to the language warning, it
should be restricted to those over 18, with
warnings that it is graphic, violent, and
involves explicit acts of degradation and
sexuality.
If you attend, do tread carefully around
the debris as you leave and avoid touching
anything associated with the stage. One
hopes that as a courtesy to the companies
that share this venue, the stage and backstage
areas will be thoroughly bleached
after every show. ( zero stars)
- Wendy King
The Free Press
review of
Hollywood Hen Pit
Mayonnaise pooper panned
Edgy Fringe show over the edge,
reviewers say; creator disagrees
By Oliver Sachgau
' There's some audiences
that do want to
see what I do, but it's
certainly not mainstream
or popular,
and I don't mind that.
Maybe it's really bad,
but it doesn't matter
to me. It's just what I
do.'
- Ian Mozdzen, one of the
creators of Hollywood Hen Pit
JESSICA BURTNICK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Quick, call
the pothole
repair crew!
His name's Dave
Johnston, but you
can call him chalk
master. Originally
from Toronto, he's
travelling across
the country in an
attempt to " chalk
the nation" one
street at a time.
On Saturday, he
created an imaginary
sinkhole in the
street at the Winnipeg
Fringe Theatre
Festival. Johnston
has already done
street art in Halifax,
Vancouver, Calgary
and Regina.
RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES
Ian Mozdzen says his Hollywood Hen Pit performance is as much for him as for the audience.
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