{"id":3302,"date":"2024-03-18T16:46:40","date_gmt":"2024-03-18T20:46:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.montgomerymag.com\/?p=3302"},"modified":"2024-03-18T16:46:40","modified_gmt":"2024-03-18T20:46:40","slug":"it-happened-by-happenstance","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montgomerymag.com\/it-happened-by-happenstance\/","title":{"rendered":"It Happened By Happenstance"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"\"
Sabrina Mandell and Mark Jaster as Rose and Ralph from BrouHaHa 2015.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

In 2005, when Sabrina Mandell met Mark Jaster in a physical theater class, an artistic partnership was born. Mandell had lived a peripatetic life. Born in Nova Scotia, she described her childhood home: \u201c[growing] up on the Bay of Fundy, known for having the highest tidal range in the world, constant wind and frequent power outages.\u201d<\/p>\n

The daughter of artists, after a brief bout at university, she wrote and performed her own poetry, studied art history, became a painter, sailed up and down the East Coast as a first mate on traditionally rigged schooners and started a theater company. These days she\u2019s a performer, producer, costume designer and all-around theatrical dynamo. For a decade she worked with the Big Apple Circus\u2019 Clown Care Program in Washington and Baltimore, and she has taught clowning and physical comedy throughout the region and beyond.<\/p>\n

Jaster, a mime, actor, musician, director and teacher, regularly conducts artist residencies for elementary schools in his home base, Montgomery County, and beyond. He trained with 20th-century mime master Marcel Marceau and later served as Marceau\u2019s teaching assistant at a summer college workshop.<\/p>\n

\u201cI had been performing as a mime for a long time,\u201d Jaster said, \u201cbut you can\u2019t join the mime company that is in every town, because there isn\u2019t one.\u201d<\/p>\n

He discovered that the medium of clowning would exercise some of his solo physical comedy and acrobatic skills, similarly. \u201cI was a deviser, making up my own pieces \u2026 but I never studied clown and I knew there was depth and craft to that art form.\u201d
\nHe signed up for a clown class.<\/p>\n

Mandell was in that same 2005 class. The rest, as they say, is history. They soon began devising their first show together, a riff on the T.S. Eliot poem \u201cLove Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\u201d and a scenario about a woman hesitating along with influences from the shadow boxes of artist Joseph Cornell.<\/p>\n

Even though his career as a mime was primarily spent as a soloist, Jaster found that he and Mandell worked well together. \u201cI warmed up to that idea \u2026. It was one of the first sacrifices to make, meaning when you collaborate with somebody you have to work with other ideas. But it was a very productive process,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n

Mandell chimed in, \u201cIt made us realize the unbelievable potential of our collaborative dialogue.\u201d Jaster continued, \u201cWe had a great time. We fell in love and the piece was really, really wonderful.\u201d As the couple were rehearsing the piece, \u201cPrufbox,\u201d its premiere, just two weeks before opening, they married. \u201cOur wedding was a big production at our house. There were 200 people. Then two weeks later, we opened our first show,\u201d Mandell said.<\/p>\n

Every Thing Happens<\/strong><\/p>\n

By 2006, the duo created Happenstance, a company that takes inspiration from physical theater, clowning, mime, classic dramas and comedies, and uses self-contained sets and costumes, homemade and found-object musical instruments, devised puppets and other theatrical techniques.<\/p>\n

A Happenstance production is often a journey into a wholly created and fully imagined world, with nods to ancient Greek drama, medieval ceremony, Shakespearean tragedy and comedy, Punch-and-Judy-style puppetry, Big Apple Circus clowns, and maybe even a saw or wrench literally thrown in for good measure.<\/p>\n

Mandell and Jaster, along with their long-time collaborators, understand the importance of wonder, surprise and humor, even when a work leans into profundity. Some of their techniques and practices feel old fashioned, drawing from Renaissance commedia dell\u2019arte, Jacobean drama or misaligned Chekhovian relationships.<\/p>\n

Their newest production, \u201cAdrift,\u201d presented a universe of ideas elicited from creation myths to arduous journeys, heralded discoveries to mythical creations in the context of the ascent of humankind. Amid moments of absurd buffoonery and eccentric on-stage magic, angelic a cappella singing accompanied this tale of human endeavor and the weaving of the human condition into memorable moments.<\/p>\n

Next up, this fall the duo takes inspiration from ironically sinister cartoonist Edward Gorey for \u201cCabaret Macabre,\u201d described as a theatrical collage. They describe this reboot as \u201ca series of dark comic vignettes, Victorian nightmares, Gothic romance, dangerous croquet and perils of the deep.\u201d And it arrives just in time for Halloween.<\/p>\n

The Happenstance company, which expands and contracts as necessary with a group of like-minded local performers, has nearly two dozen shows in its current repertory. Because they collaborate closely to make everything themselves from the script to the set, props, costumes, instruments, wigs and puppets, they are nimble. Every show must fit exactly into the van they use. That enables them to tour, as they did this past summer, up and down the East Coast, from Novia Scotia and Maine to Stanton, Va., as well as local outdoor venues in the county.<\/p>\n

\u201cWe can travel to little places like the old vaudeville circuit,\u201d Jaster said. \u201cThe small-town venues that have beautiful little theaters and historic main streets.\u201d<\/p>\n

When not on stage or on the road, the artistic and life partners live in a big, old country-style farmhouse in Rockville. The house, which was initially the theater\u2019s rehearsal studio, now also serves as prop and costume shop, plus storage for various and sundry tools, instruments and found materials. Located in Parklawn Park, Jaster and Mandell rent it from the Park and Planning Commission. \u201cOver the years, we\u2019ve just filled this house up,\u201d Mandell said, gesturing around the living room filled with antiques, souvenirs and potential or previous props. They no longer rehearse at home \u2014 for group works they work in a private home ballroom in Adelphi. \u201cWe\u2019ve grown out of the house when [working] with the full ensemble,\u201d Jaster explained.<\/p>\n

As for new works, the Happenstance team takes its time in the development and creative process. They don\u2019t feel the need to create a new work every season and will readily re-mount previous works as the aesthetics and themes are intentionally timeless. Mandell noted, \u201cMark and I have been working for a long time on a new vaudeville duo \u2026. We just finished performing at the Renaissance Festival again, but in terms of a new full ensemble piece, we\u2019re not doing that yet, probably next year.\u201d<\/p>\n

Present at Creation<\/strong><\/p>\n

Jaster and Mandell have grown into the process they use to craft a new production. \u201cWe start basically with the mime tradition,\u201d Jaster said, \u201ca bare stage and nothing else.\u201d
\n\u201cAnd your body,\u201d Mandell added. \u201cSo, all the choices are critical and we really hold to that.<\/p>\n

It means you don\u2019t just move furniture if you have a set change. Instead, we ask what is in the scene that is going to make us have to move the furniture?\u201d<\/p>\n

She continued, \u201cSometimes we\u2019ll have an idea [about] a particular object. Then we stop everything, go and make the object. And then, based on what the object becomes, we discover how it behaves, and that informs what we do. We\u2019re always playing this game \u2026 always keeping it playful.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cThat,\u201d Jaster underlined, \u201cis really a priority for us.\u201d<\/p>\n

Additional to a playful mindset, the couple consciously tries not to give too much information to the audience. \u201cWe want the audience to insert that with their imaginations,\u201d Mandell said. \u201cAnd that\u2019s hard because we\u2019re all good storytellers, so we often have to pull back from revealing the whole story to leave room for openness.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cThe impulse,\u201d she added, \u201cis to answer all the questions, but our value is to not answer them, even when we understand the answer.\u201d But, Jaster continued, \u201cPeople have told us that as the audience they feel like they\u2019re in good hands. When they come in, they know we\u2019re going to bring them along with us.\u201d<\/p>\n

For information on Happenstance Theater, visit https:\/\/www.happenstancetheater.com\/.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

In 2005, when Sabrina Mandell met Mark Jaster in a physical theater class, an artistic partnership was born. Mandell had lived a peripatetic life. Born in Nova Scotia, she described her childhood home: \u201c[growing] up on the Bay of Fundy, known for having the highest tidal range in the world, constant wind and frequent power […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":53,"featured_media":3303,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[32],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"\nIt Happened By Happenstance - Montgomery Magazine<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.montgomerymag.com\/it-happened-by-happenstance\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"It Happened By Happenstance - Montgomery Magazine\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In 2005, when Sabrina Mandell met Mark Jaster in a physical theater class, an artistic partnership was born. 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