“If it isn’t absolutely necessary, get rid of it.” Rabbit Hole eschews technology in favor of the imaginations of performers and audience. Productions are stripped-down affairs in which the actors create everything onstage, often providing music and sound effects, as well as lighting with hand-held clip lights. Sets, costumes, and props are as simple as possible. By depending on the actors to communicate everything, the ensemble develops a relationship with audience members, who complete the onstage images in their own imaginations.
Techniques
The company’s emphasis on a minimalist aesthetic results in works that are light on technical spectacle, creating the world of the play largely through actor-generated movement and sound. In The Siblings, an early RH production, this concept worked hand-in-hand with the existentialist material. The play had the feel of a work from the Theatre of the Absurd, focusing on a lack of meaning in a cruel, godless universe, but without that genre's suspension of a linear narrative. The Transformation of Dr. Jekyll, on the other hand, maintained many of the existential questions while taking the approach of a collage-style work, using everything from traditional dramatic conflict to puppetry in order to convey the story. The focus of Rabbit Hole's four successive works based on Bram Stoker’s novel, Dracula, and F.W. Murnau’s silent film, Nosferatu, was a consideration of storytelling. In these productions, the company created and developed storytelling techniques that utilized the ensemble as a composer of atmosphere. Actor-produced lighting and sound created the impression of such settings as ships’ holds and forests, and the characterization of non-human entities such as horses to fog created environments which supported the action of the productions. The production, A Rope in the Abyss, was both realistic and surrealistic simultaneously, with the characters of the play based in a world with a fourth wall. Like the work of Grotowski, the impulse behind the production was to use the false reality of the theatre to face its audience with the intense, and often grim, realities of the world in which they live. The company's 2008 production, Big Thick Rod, addressed the theme of. The play contains a combination of linguistic and slapstick humor, much in the vein of the Theatre of the Ridiculous plays of Charles Ludlam. Big Thick Rod, by Resident Playwright Stanton Wood, premiered in the New York International Fringe Festival, in August 2008. In 2009. Rabbit Hole Ensemble presented Shadow of Himself, by Obie Award-winning playwright Neal Bell. Stanton Wood's Candide Americana will be presented at FringeNYC in August, 2009.
2008 - Outstanding Lighting Design: Kevin Hardy, New York Innovative Theatre Award
For The Night of Nosferatu
2008 - Nominated, New York Innovative Theatre Awards:
For The Night of Nosferatu
2007 – “Top 10 of 2007,” Popshifter.com: The Night of Nosferatu
2007 – “Best Cape Theatre 2007,” Cape Cod Times:The Night of Nosferatu
2006 – Outstanding Direction: Edward Elefterion, Midtown International Theatre Festival “Best of the Fest Award”
For Nosferatu: The Morning of My Death
2006 – Nominated, Midtown International Theatre Festival “Best of the Fest Awards”
For Nosferatu: The Morning of My Death
Community
In the spring of 2008, Rabbit Hole Ensemble founded an initiative to bring theatre to underserved communities. With the original production, A Rope in the Abyss, as its cornerstone, the project brought free performances to sites throughout Brooklyn, NY, including homeless shelters, assisted living facilities, and hospitals. A Rope in the Abyss, a new play about neuroscience, brain injury, and the tenuous nature of identity, was presented in partnership with the Brain Injury Association of New York State. The project brought together hundreds of Brooklyn residents across five neighborhoods, and will be continued annually, with a new show each year, as part of Rabbit Hole Ensemble's season.