The sound of working 9-to-5
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Young Chang
The air conditioner blasts strong inside South Coast Repertory’s
Second Stage theater, but the chill that pervades has nothing to do with
climate.
Aram Arslanian’s music has jump-started the world premiere of Annie
Weisman’s “Hold Please.” It’s a rhythmic, techno mix of telephone beeps,
fax rings, computer whirls, typewriter clicks -- office sounds that are
the backdrop of most of our lives. The audible chaos of modernity and
technology is clearly the culprit of this undeniable chill.
But colder even still in this hilarious production about four female
employees in a high rise building is the contrast of their emotions with
their regimented lives. The commissioned SCR production opened Friday and
will run through Oct. 21.
In “Hold Please,” Erika and Jessica are the two young assistants who
split shifts answering phones. Grace and Agatha are older, less
techno-savvy and less tolerant of being sexually harassed by the male
boss, whom Erika secretly doesn’t seem to mind.
The four ladies have mastered the multi-tasking art of chatting --
subjects range from men to lip gloss and how glossy is not always good --
while answering calls in their high-pitched voices and scripted, “No he’s
not, but I can take a message!” attitudes.
Woven into their phone-taking, typing and message recording are deeply
human moments of personal struggles and demons.
Arslanian, the show’s sound designer, musicalizes all that is felt.
“I wanted to keep the atmosphere of a high-rise office building,” the
38-year-old said. “Beyond what was happening emotionally with the
characters, I wanted to keep a sense of where they were. For a lot of
people that work in these cubicles, there’s not much atmosphere.”
Arslanian roamed no further than his own Los Angeles house to compile
his electronic pattern. With a hard-disk recording system and a 50-foot
microphone cable, he created music with five different telephone rings,
the clicks and buzz of a fax machine transmitting, the beeps and dialing
of a computer connecting to the Internet, the audible storm of a monitor
booting, the nerve-racking pace of a typewriter being pounded and
synthesizer effects that tied it all together.
A centerpiece of the show includes composer Leroy Anderson’s “The
Typewriter,” an old Boston Pops classic that Arslanian techno-fied.
“In doing that, I wanted to avoid any kind of melodic structure in the
music,” he said. “I wanted to sound very not human, cold. It’s catchy
though.”
The cast even danced to his tunes between rehearsals, which was funny
to watch, Arslanian laughed.
Linda Gehringer, who plays Grace, says four women, a hilarious script
and equally comedic music are ingredients for fun rehearsals.
“It can give you, as an actor, so much energy,” Gehringer said of
music. “Music and sound can tell you so much that you could spend pages
of words trying to explain. A piece of music can open emotions and make
you laugh.”
Which is what you’ll be doing, despite how dark Weisman lets herself
get in some of the honest issues she explores. Though hilarious and sharp
and playful in her musical use of dialogue, Weisman’s piece is more than
just a night of laughs.
“She gets to the core of real unique problems in a very unique way,”
Gehringer said.
FYI
WHAT: “Hold Please”
WHEN: Through Oct. 21. 7:45 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday, 2 p.m.
matinees on Saturday and Sunday.
WHERE: South Coast Repertory’s Second Stage, 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
COST: $19-$51
CALL: (714) 708-5555
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