Tony-winning San Fran Mime Troupe Have a City for Sale, Through Sept. 12 | Playbill

Related Articles
News Tony-winning San Fran Mime Troupe Have a City for Sale, Through Sept. 12 Celebrating their 40 years together as a theatre group, the San Francisco Mime Troupe is presenting City for Sale, a musical about the urban housing crisis, July 4-Sept. 12, in parks across the San Fran area.

Celebrating their 40 years together as a theatre group, the San Francisco Mime Troupe is presenting City for Sale, a musical about the urban housing crisis, July 4-Sept. 12, in parks across the San Fran area.

With original music, City targets politicians and corporations who overrun neighborhoods for profits. Keiko Shimosato will direct. The piece was originally titled Division Street but was changed when the company learned of another play with the same title.

The S.F. Mime Troupe was founded in 1959 by R.G. Davis, a member of the Actors' Workshop. Originally, the troupe did perform "silent plays" with no dialogue but later introduced speech because they felt silence dampened the audiences's emotional response. In 1962, the troupe performed extensively in non-theatrical locations like parks, streets, and bay-side. During that time, the troupe maintained to traditional mime fare, performing works like Moliere's Scapin, Goldini's The Servant of Two Masters and Jarry's Ubu Roi in a presentational commedia dell'arte style.

During the mid-sixties, with San Francisco's legendary Haight-Ashbury scene in full force, Troupe members took notice of the changing society around them and began performing plays with the intent of radical political agitation -- a Brechtian mentality using theatre as agitprop. They presented A Minstrel Show, or, Civil Rights in a Cracker Barrel, a vicious attack on racism, in 1966. The company began touring these productions across the United States and Canada and creating other pieces along the way, like The Independent Female, and Seize the Time: The Story of Chairman Bobby Seale and the Black Panther Party.

When Davis left the group in 1969, it became a collective, issuing the statement, "We are committed to change, not to Art. We have tried to cut through the aristocratic and square notion of what theatre is and risk our egos to keep the search open for better ways of making theatre, in content and style, a living radical force." In 1987, The San Francisco Mime Troupe won the Regional Theatre Tony Award, for sustained excellence.

For more information, and specific park scheduling call (415) 285 1717.

-- By Sean McGrath

 
RELATED:
Today’s Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!