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Jean Genet The Balcony at The Old Mint

My talent will be the love I feel for that which constitutes the world of prisons and penal colonies. Not that I want to transform them or bring them around to your kind of life, or that I look upon them with indulgence or pity: I recognize in thieves, traitors and murderers, in the ruthless and the cunning, a deep beauty — a sunken beauty — which I deny you.
Jean Genet, The Aesthetics of Evil

Jean Genet: the motherfucker understood. Not in some grad school seminar way, but in his bones, in his blood, in whatever diseased magnificent corner of his soul produced these wet dreams about power and sex and the gorgeous rot underneath civilization’s marble facade.

And Michael and I, we took that understanding and shoved it inside San Francisco’s Old Mint like a fist through glass.

Because what else is the Old Mint but America’s own house of illusions? All that Greco-Roman architectural horseshit, those columns designed to make you genuflect before Capital itself, the literal temple where they minted the lies we agreed to call currency. And then, and this is the part that made me lose my mind when I found out, after World War II, they turned part of it into a CIA station. A CIA station. The temple of money becomes the temple of secrets. Espionage in the counting house. Spies operating out of the vaults.

You couldn’t write better Genet if you tried.

We staged The Balcony there. It was so obvious it was brilliant, or maybe so brilliant it was obvious, I could never tell the difference and neither could Genet.

These photographs I took, they’ve got a quality, that thing where the theater becomes more real than reality, which is exactly what Genet was screaming about. The costumes dripping with that baroque excess, Latifa’s couture against cold institutional stone. Our performers half, swallowed by shadows in rooms that actually held power once, back when power still needed physical vaults instead of just servers in Dubai.

There’s Ryan Tacata’s Carmen working those ecclesiastical robes, the General and the Judge and the Bishop all playing dress-up in a building that was designed for dress-up, for the grand theater of legitimacy. Our beggar’s girl, Nathalie Brilliant, looking like she crawled out of a Caravaggio by way of the Tenderloin.

And the thing is, the thing Genet knew and we were betting everything on, is that there’s no difference. The brothel and the government building and the intelligence bureau, the fantasy and the institution, the whore and the bishop and the spy, it’s all the same con, the same gorgeous, necessary, murderous pageant. We’re all just playing roles in someone else’s wet dream of order.

We didn’t do some safe black-box production. We took Genet’s script about revolutionaries trying to storm the palace of illusions and staged it in an actual palace, a monument to American empire at its most grandiose and delusional. That took either courage or madness, and the best work never bothers to distinguish between the two.

What kills me looking back at these images is how much they look like documentary photographs from some revolution that never quite happened, or maybe one that’s always happening, always about to crest, always on the verge. That’s San Francisco’s story too, isn’t it? All that perpetual uprising against itself.

Genet would’ve dug it. The thief finding his way into the treasury, making it his whorehouse, his theater, his church. Making it tell the truth for once.

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Genet Balcony Old Mint Florentina

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Tableau I

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Tableau III

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Tableau IV

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Madame Irma: Val Sinckler
Police Chief: Scott Baker
Carmen: Ryan Tacata
General: Jack Halton
Judge: Lauren Dunagan
Bishop: Jeff Schwartz
Beggar/Envoy: Florentina Mocanu-Schendel
Arthur: Valerie Fachman
Elyane: Audrey Dundee Hannah
Roger: Kellen Hoxworth
Beggar’s Girl/Chantal/Slave: Nathalie Brilliant
Thief/Georgette: Amy Munz
Margot: Tonyanna Borkovi
Rosine/Armand/Blood: Todd Pivetti
Luke/Sperm: M.G. Renu Cappelli
Louis/Tears: Will Trichon

Co- Directors/Producers: Jamie Lyons & Michael Hunter
Visual Art & Costumes: Latifa Medjdoub
Lead Designer: Angrette McCloskey
Music Director/Composer: Nathaniel Berman
Sound Artist: Derek Philips
Production Manager: Jamie Freebury
Producer/Community Outreach: Elizabeth Nordt
Props: Megan Hillard
Art Director: Niki Ulehla
Set Construction: Ariane Fehrenkamp

Special Thanks: Tim Yarish, Rebecca Lee, Jason Araujo, Derek Remski, Jason Macario, Jon Lau, Brant Downes, Barry Kendall, Matthew Daube, Jeanette Hunter, John Hadden, Lauren Dietrich Chavez and We Players, Ann Hatch, Braden Weeks Earp, Kristie Wu.

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