Naomi Westerman brings a high-concept, multifaceted journey by grief to VAULT competition. Incorporating components of sport exhibits, choose-your-own-adventure and viewers options, Batman (AKA Naomi’s Death Show) spans silliness to poignance. Upon arriving on the venue, attendees are met with a small goodie bag on their seats: this features a chocolate biscuit, pencil, bingo card, and squeaky toy. Westerman goes on to clarify how a few of these objects can be included into the efficiency. The squeaky toy serves as a ‘bat signal’: she describes that in most media we don’t get to decide on the story that’s instructed to…
Rating
Excellent
An emotional rollercoaster by life, loss of life, rats, and sharks, delivered in choose-your-own-adventure format.
Naomi Westerman brings a high-concept, multifaceted journey by grief to VAULT competition. Incorporating components of sport exhibits, choose-your-own-adventure and viewers options, Batman (AKA Naomi’s Death Show) spans silliness to poignance.
Upon arriving on the venue, attendees are met with a small goodie bag on their seats: this features a chocolate biscuit, pencil, bingo card, and squeaky toy. Westerman goes on to clarify how a few of these objects can be included into the efficiency. The squeaky toy serves as a ‘bat signal’: she describes that in most media we don’t get to decide on the story that’s instructed to us, subsequently she is providing us the chance to interrupt her story and make room for engagement. We play “death bingo”, exploring the methods through which the reaper might come for us, making for a enjoyable entry into the darkness.
Batman is autobiographical, detailing Westerman’s breadth and depth of misfortune and discovering her ft in writing regardless of all of it. This is a deeply shifting present, impactful by the character of its materials, nevertheless made thought-provoking and uplifting because of Westerman’s cautious crafting. She explores totally different cultural approaches to loss of life: how she hopes anthropologists will discover a horde of buried pet rats in her father’s grave, and the way grieving might be a possibility for happiness. A very particular second is Westerman’s recreation of sitting Shiva, through which viewers members are invited to mild a candle, eat some meals, and bear in mind these pricey to us whom we have now misplaced. This is a present that codifies Westerman’s personal familiarity with grief, however invitations the remainder of us into the expertise, elevating immersive theatre right into a therapeutic expertise.
Westerman does a beautiful job of balancing heavy content material materials with lighter moments: the silliness of squeaky toys, chocolate biscuits, and rat pyjamas create a welcoming atmosphere that helps break the taboo of discussing loss of life. Special credit score ought to go to Westerman’s Emotional Support Shark, a task I wish to see function extra usually on London’s levels. The manufacturing ends with dialogue of funeral songs the deceased would have beloved, and the potential of reincarnation. The piece delivers an general supply of catharsis each for the playwright and the viewers, and is fantastically suited to the intimacy of the Vaults’ Studio area.
Batman (AKA Naomi’s Death Show) tackles difficult topics with care and thoughtfulness, incorporating its viewers right into a better means of coping with grief. Westerman’s private story is, for lack of a much less clichéd time period, inspiring, and it’s a reward to convey this life’s expertise to a wider viewers. It should even be stated that extra exhibits ought to supply chocolate biscuits (with vegan choices!) and cuddly sharks.
Written by: Naomi Westerman
Directed by: Katharina Reinthaller
Produced by: Chronic Insanity
Batman (AKA Naomi’s Death Show) performed as a part of VAULT Festival 2023, and has accomplished its present run.