Total Rating: 
***
Previews: 
February 7, 2013
Ended: 
February 9, 2013
Country: 
USA
State: 
Florida
City: 
Sarasota
Company/Producers: 
Ringling Museum of Art / New Stages (Dwight Currie, curator)
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Historic Asolo
Theater Address: 
Ringling Museum of Art Visitors Center
Phone: 
941-360-7399
Website: 
ringling.org
Running Time: 
90 min
Genre: 
Performance
Author: 
Bill Bowers
Director: 
Scott Illingworth
Review: 

In the eleven episodes comprising Beyond Words,Bill Bowers narrates, mimes, sometimes dances and acts parts of his life. From his sketch, “What Is a Boy?” through “What Makes a Boy a Man?”, he matures to his present self--happy as a performer and as a partner in a gay marriage.

The performance is much aided by recorded music of Randy Redd, Nanci Griffith, Erik Satie, Suzzy Roche and Lori McKenna -- much of it sung. Bowers also uses Karen Bashkirew’s poem “Sounds” for a segment in which he mimes a bicyclist coming across the bloody scene in “Laramie, Wyoming 1998” and exploring it.

For an adaptation of “Winesburg, Ohio 1919,” he uses the part of Sherwood Anderson’s novel that describes a man who uses his hands deftly doing “picking” in fields and how, under his previous real name and vocation as a school teacher, those hands got him into terrible trouble. Bowers’ miming is graceful, but it plus his narrating lack dramatic punch.

The first part of Bowers’ program resembles a vaudeville review. Maybe because it uses stereotyped country-and-western people. An extended late re-creation of Bowers’ week as a visiting mime (and then some) in “Choteau, Montana 2002” thrills with authenticity. One could welcome a complete one-act devoted to people and place interacting with a visiting artist there.

It is ironic that the best part of mime Bowers’ program is not beyond, but dependent on, his words. And there’s the abovementioned music that underlies and bolsters the “Narrative in Motion” theme of the Ringling Museum’s “Art of Our Time” series of performances.

Cast: 
Bill Bowers
Technical: 
Sound: David Margolin Lawson; Costumes: Michael Growier; Lighting: Lee Terry
Miscellaneous: 
The program is one of four presented in “Art of Our Time”-- a series of contemporary performances presented by the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in 2013. The New Stages series operates on the principle stated by the Ringling’s legendary A. Everett Austin, Jr., Director: “The Museum is the place to integrate the arts and bring them alive.”
Critic: 
Marie J. Kilker
Date Reviewed: 
February 2013