Alone at Last, with Laughing Stock

November 25, 2024
2 mins read

In early September, we attended a performance of Alone at Last by Laughing Stock, Chicago’s premier Commedia dell’Arte theatre, at Ridgeville Park in Evanston. In this post, we’ll share some of the images we captured as part of a test of our new camera, as well as some well deserved appreciation for this theatrical form and the performers who make it.

If the company name sounds familiar to readers of the Traveller, Distant Era previously photographed Laughing Stock’s traditional commedia Over My Dead Body: or, How to Distribute Generational Wealth, two years ago in November 2022.

Here’s a look back at the production images for that show.

And here are the portraits we made for it.

A Walk in the Park

Alone at Last wasn’t an assignment or a gig. We went to the show because we love their work. We also wanted to support our dear friend and collaborator Jennifer Mohr, whose name likely appears in the pages of the Traveller more than any other aside from myself and Elizabeth.

Since Alone at Last took place in the park in daylight and there were no objections to taking photos from the front row, I familiarized myself with the controls and settings on the Canon R5 Mark II and its 24–105mm f/2.8 lens, which brought me close to the action just as easily as it zoomed out to take in the whole stage. As a result, I got to practice and find my way around the new gear while providing a theatre company we love with some images from their show. I was pleased with the new focusing capabilities, which tracked subjects’ eyes across scenes and made capturing action very easy in full daylight.

Photographing the show not only served as the perfect training ground for familiarizing myself with the new camera functions, but I was also honored to provide Laughing Stock with dozens of photographs to promote their future work.

A Personal Note on Commedia dell’Arte

I love this style of work. It reminds me of my roots as a street performer at the Ohio Renaissance Festival in the early 1990s. Partly because of the crazy over-the-top commedia style street plays we did. Partly because of the Renaissance faire acts that surrounded us then—the masks and costumes and stock characters and comedy bits. As kids, we weren’t very aware of the similarities between our silly street bits and commedia, but in hindsight it seems we channeling commedia style performance unwittingly.

We were influenced by the mechanicals from A Midsummer Night’s Dream. I remember being inspired by Benedick from Kenneth Branagh’s Much Ado About Nothing, pretentious artists, and The Tick, while looking up to the then-new Swordsmen performers, and all of this amounted to playing Capitano, though I did not know it at the time.

The Drammattex Brothers, 1997.

Commedia reminds me of a living Saturday-morning-cartoon world. Characters are vibrant, general, and utterly knowable; their actions are clear. Regardless what happens in the narrative, it’s still like a cartoon and obeys cartoon rules. It’s an optimistic world, a larger-than-life world. Even in the grimmer, political neo commedia I’ve seen by The Conspirators, sinister, apocalyptic dread is accompanied by clown makeup, rim shot, and cymbal. It might be deadly serious, but it still exists outside the bounds of this reality. We can still laugh, no matter how dark it gets.

The Laughing Stock shows I’ve seen have been bright and fun; there’s never the sense that anything awful will happen in them; they’re sub realities that offer a blissful break from this world’s complications and its sorrows. Escape, in the necessary sense. Or, as Laughing Stock puts it:

Laughing Stock Theatre creates and performs substantive, high-quality Commedia dell’Arte that spectacularizes the mundane and delights our audiences.

The Company

I love what Laughing Stock does and have been so happy to capture their work. Check out Laughing Stock’s work and mission on their website, and check out their company here.

Alone at Last featured: Claire Proepper, Jennifer Mohr, and Shea Lee, with closing thanks from Martin Downs.

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Steven Townshend is a fine art/portrait photographer and writer with a background in theatre, written narrative, and award-winning game design. As a young artist, Steven toured the US and Canada performing in Shakespeare companies while journaling their moments on paper and film. In his transition from stage to page, Steven continued to work as a theatre photographer, capturing dramatic scenes while incorporating elements of costume, makeup, and theatrical lighting in his work. Drawn to stories set in other times and places, Steven creates works through which fellow dreamers and time travelers might examine their own humanity or find familiar comfort in the reflections of the people and places of a distant era.

The All Worlds Traveller

Welcome to The All Worlds Traveller, an eclectic collection of thoughts, pictures, and stories from a Distant Era. Illustrated with Distant Era art and photographs, these pages explore the stories and worlds of people beyond the here and now, and the people and creative processes behind such stories. This is a blog about photography and narrative; history and myth; fantasy, science-fiction, and the weird; creation and experience. This is a blog about stories.

Steven Townshend

I’m Steven Townshend—your guide, scribe, editor, and humble narrator. The All Worlds Traveller is my personal publication, an exploratory conversation about stories and how we interact with them, from photographs to narratives to games—a kind of variety show in print. It is a conversation with other artists who explore the past, the future, and the fantastical in their work. Not one world—but all worlds. Where Distant Era shows stories in images, The All Worlds Traveller is all about the words.

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About a Distant Era

Distant Era creates fine art and portrait photographs of people and places from imagined pasts, possible futures, and magical realities. In collaboration with other artists, we evoke these distant eras with theatrical costume and makeup, evocative scenery, and deliberate lighting, and we enhance them with contemporary tools to cast these captured moments in the light of long ago or far away. We long to walk the lion-decorated streets of Babylon, to visit alien worlds aboard an interstellar vessel, and to observe the native dances of elves. Our images are windows to speculative realities and postcards from the past. They are consolation for fellow time travelers who long to look beyond the familiar scenery of the present and gaze upon the people and places of a distant era.

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