
Quinn said that Pig Iron has been working with the tension between increasing conformity and increasing individualism in America. So he headed west to try to capture some of that openness, "where people can grow and develop completely and uniquely on their own."
Characters are inspired by such things as these twin cacti with "prickly dispositions:"

And the road runner:

And other phenomena of the American West, including a shy truck (really!), the Joshua tree, and the tumbleweed.
Unique to this night, though, was getting a peek inside Pig Iron's character development. Clowning is at the essence of Welcome to Yuba City, and Quinn introduced the process of examination and transformation used by the cast members to create their characters. Described as "embracing their inner clown," Sarah, Dito, Charlotte, and Jeff accentuated and exaggerated their bodies' forms. The cast worked closely with Italian clown master Giovanni Fusetti to identify their own personal idiosyncrasies and out of these, create unique clowns to play with.
Take Charlotte:

Here, Quinn shows how Charlotte's shoulders are ever-so-slightly rounded forward:

Pushing them far forward yields:

That becomes the dominant physical feature of the character, and with a couple of other tweaks, a costume change, and a clown nose, meet Shania:

And other characters emerge as well. On the left is Geoff. With a slight bounce in his step pushed to an extreme, he becomes Zeke, a guy who runs a "compound" and loves to pose. On the right is Dito, whose long arms have led his transformation into Mickey, with Charlotte and Sarah also as Mickey:

To transform into cowboys, Quinn said, they looked at two ways that the body undulates. Working with Sarah, they showed the cowboy undulation to be front-to-back – the first part of the motion is similar to what happens when you're swimming underwater and come up to break the surface. Do that, then lean a little further back to take in your surroundings, and voila – cowboy:

At the end of the event, some of these characters came together in a very physical household scene where Geoff's character, an elderly man of the West, tries to make it across the stage using his walker. Hilarity ensues.
The Pig Iron process is especially intriguing because of its collaborative nature. The performers take actions and ideas that appeal to them personally, and bring what emerges to the table. In July and August they'll be working more intensively to bring the show together, but the process seems to be one of emergence than of top-down writing and direction. Maybe this explains the playfulness that Pig Iron always delivers?
Anyway, if you missed it on Tuesday, too bad. But here's the obligatory plug: Tickets for Welcome to Yuba City are on sale now!

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