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Merry Marxmas:
The Plight of the Ruling Class
by Jason Hart photo by Laura Gorrzek
May 5 is Karl Marx’s birthday, but in the world of Entrepreneurial Communism, it’s also Marxmas. On Marxmas, Ben
Turk has been known to dress as the author of The Communist Manifesto and take to the streets – to sell Marx-themed
merchandise. You aren’t likely to see Turk this Marxmas, because he’ll be busy with The Plight of the Ruling Class, a new
collection of one-act plays being produced by Insurgent
Theatre, the company he co-founded and runs with Tracy
Doyle.
Insurgent Theatre launched under the name S-MartKino
in 2003. Director and actor Doyle teamed up with Turk,
who writes. Their vision was to bring high quality, locally
produced political theatre to the masses, and to change
America’s current political system while doing so.
Entrepreneurial Communism guides the practice of
Insurgent Theatre. This theory, at first glance an inherent
contradiction, was formed by Turk while he was a
Political Science student at UWM. Turk explains it this
way: “It’s communist because it believes in an overhaul
of our economic system, where the worker receives the
full product of their labor. It’s entrepreneurial because it
aims to achieve that by going into business instead of
politics.”
Entrepreneurial communism works like this: the revenues
from each show are split 50/50, with half divided evenly
amongst all of the cast and crew, and with the other half being used as seed money for the next show. Insurgent is
also careful about where and how they spend their money: “We won’t sell ads in the program to someone who isn’t a
small, local business. We won’t buy shit at Wal-mart. We try to keep it as small and local as possible.”
The Plight of the Ruling Class is a set of three one-acts that focuses on incendiary issues: racism, Muslim rights, rape.
The plays are written by Turk and Milwaukee playwright John Manno. Doyle is directing two of the pieces, and Alamo
Basement’s Mike Q. Hanlon is directing the third. I watched an early run-through of the plays, and I was blown away
by the quality of the acting and writing, and also by the courage demonstrated by their choice of topics.
Cured, the play written by Manno, is especially interesting. Set in an alternate version of reality, Cured makes a
statement about our blind acceptance of cultural norms and practices. I’ve been asked not to reveal the most shocking
parts of Cured, and I won’t. I don’t enjoy learning crucial information about pieces before I see them. I’ll only say that
you should make every attempt to see this play, or have someone who does tell you what it’s about.
Insurgent’s most memorable project was the original full-length one act Bring the War Home, about 1960s radical
group The Weather Underground. Bring the War Home was written by Turk, and directed by Doyle. It was the first
play produced in Insurgent’s current home, the Astor Theatre, and sold out every performance except for one during
a massive blizzard.
Insurgent loves nothing so much as conflict. It’s disappointing to them, then, that self-selecting audiences at previous
shows have led to unitary interpretations of their work. “No one disagreed with us. We were hoping we could create
a discussion. It was more people who agreed with each other talking amongst themselves,” Turk said of the talkback
afterwards.
“That’s something we’re addressing in the rewrite,” said Doyle. “We are
addressing the concern that most left-wingers saw it as a push towards
doing the things the Weather Underground were doing. It wasn’t supposed
to be pro-violence or pro-pacifism.”
“Ultimately, it’s a criticism of political action – that going and fighting
the state is the way to change society,” said Turk. Insurgent prefers to work
from within, believing that change is ultimately rooted in the economy.
Their theory is that the first step is to develop new economic patterns and
systems, and then the politics and society will fall into place.
They aim to transform the theatre scene too, bringing in people without
experience. “There are a lot of people who have never done theatre before,
and thought maybe that’s something I can do…” said Doyle. “But then
they’re intimidated by the theatre scene,” continued Turk. Turk and Doyle
do not come from theatre backgrounds – Doyle was a microbiology student
and works in a lab, Turk has a degree in political science from UWM.
Insurgent has recently entered into collaboration with Milwaukee theatre
groups Alamo Basement, The Paris Business Review, and Pink Banana. The
four groups have formed a DIY collective to assist each other and to bring
entertaining theatre to the Milwaukee community. Plight is the first show produced by this as-yet unnamed collective,
using the talents of members of all four groups. Perhaps Milwaukee will be the home base of an entrepreneurial
communist DIY theatre movement.
Insurgent Theatre’s Plight of the Ruling Class runs 8 PM May 3-6, 10-13
at the Astor Theatre (Inside of the Brady Street Pharmacy).
For more information visit www.insurgenttheatre.org
Riverwest Currents online edition - May, 2006
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