Award-Winning
Play DIRT receives
Canadian Premiere at Vancouver Fringe Festival
THE PLAY:
“Aesthetically, it is simple, but the
subject stands out on its own. The lights go down, and a man
in darkness tells his story – Dirt – a play about
racism and the havoc it wreaks on the human spirit. For seventy-five
minutes, the stage belongs to Austrian-American actor Christopher
Domig, who brings depth, turmoil, and even a touch of well-pruned
humor to the lonely role of Sad, a 30-year-old Iraqi man living
illegally in the United States. He sells roses on the street:
his name is Sad but he is not sad.
Sad is an Arab living in our city in 2008. He loves the English
language, and America too. He is thankful for the life he
is “allowed” to live in this country, and is sensitively
aware of his rights – and lack thereof. He is careful
about what he says and does, to the point that he remarks
repeatedly he has never once sat on a park bench in this city.
To Sad, the benches are reserved for the people he at once
admires and abhors, including the 40-year-old men that buy
his roses but refuse to look him in the eye. He resents their
behavior yet feels obligated to respect them, and the exploration
of this conflict drives the entire play.

Christopher Domig invokes a complex character alive with passion.
The play confronts weighty issues, but Sad is likeable –
endearing, even, especially during lighthearted moments. Domig
guides the audience through the performance, his hands leading
his words as his eyes flash back and forth – desperately
at times – in search of a reaction. Like Sad’s
character, the text keeps you guessing: it seems real and
conversational as Sad reflects, changes the subject, lies,
confesses and repeats himself – elaborating or even
reneging on earlier words.
Sad also speaks without self-righteousness or martyrdom, thanks
to the care shown by author and actor alike. Instead, he is
a complex human – flawed, angry and at odds with himself
as he tries to reconcile his outrage with feelings of duty
to be gracious towards the same people that spur his anger.
In his mind he is, after all, an illegal immigrant living
in a country that he cannot call his own, and he should be
grateful for his life, no matter how harshly he is treated.
The play ends, and Sad’s opinions have been left so
muddled that no one knows quite what to believe. The final
climax is intense, and the audience leaves with heavy hearts
yet consumed by thought. They have experienced another person’s
life, and the questions about what they have heard gnaw at
them while they pick apart the anecdotes, memories, lies and
emotions that comprise Sad’s truth.
Triumphantly, Dirt pulls the audience into a fray that forces
each individual to examine her own prejudices. The hallmark
of a successful production is how it stays with the audience
beyond the performance, and for once, it seems that leaving
with dirty hands may be a good thing.”
– by Audrey Dimola (excerpts taken from LIC magazine
10th Issue, the review of DIRT)
www.licmagazine.com
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