Difference between revisions of "The Entertainment"

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[[File:EntertainmentHead.png|thumb|right|The cover for the ''Entertainment'' script.]]
 
[[File:EntertainmentHead.png|thumb|right|The cover for the ''Entertainment'' script.]]
It is also the name of a play directed by [[James B. Carrington]], with adaptation by [[Joseph Wheattree]] of two original plays, ''A Reckoning'' and ''A Bar-fly'' (both written by [[Lem Doolittle]]), to be performed simultaneously. The setting was designed by [[Lula Chamberlain]].
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It is also the name of a play directed by [[James B. Carrington]], with adaptation by [[Joseph Wheattree]] of two original plays: ''A Reckoning'' and ''A Bar-fly'' (both written by [[Lem Doolittle]]), to be performed simultaneously. The setting was designed by [[Lula Chamberlain]]. In the interlude, it is performed in [[the Lower Depths]].
  
 
''The Entertainment'' is available for download [http://kentuckyroutezero.com/the-entertainment/ here].
 
''The Entertainment'' is available for download [http://kentuckyroutezero.com/the-entertainment/ here].
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[[Category:Games]]
 
[[Category:Games]]
 
[[Category:The Entertainment|*]]
 
[[Category:The Entertainment|*]]
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[[Category:The Lower Depths]]
 
[[Category:Real world]]
 
[[Category:Real world]]
 
[[Category:Fictional]]
 
[[Category:Fictional]]

Revision as of 13:24, 16 January 2020

The Entertainment is the second Kentucky Route Zero interlude, released online on November 22, 2013 between Acts II and III.

The cover for the Entertainment script.

It is also the name of a play directed by James B. Carrington, with adaptation by Joseph Wheattree of two original plays: A Reckoning and A Bar-fly (both written by Lem Doolittle), to be performed simultaneously. The setting was designed by Lula Chamberlain. In the interlude, it is performed in the Lower Depths.

The Entertainment is available for download here.

Development & background

The game was originally developed for the Oculus Rift, a version which is now unavailable and unsupported. This design, which gave players direct control of the camera, constrained detailed action to happen close to the player character and resulted in the decision to put the player on-stage as an actor, albeit one with no lines. Cardboard Computer stated in a December 2013 newsletter that the game and one-act play was inspired by modern-era playwrights Eugene O'Neill, Samuel Beckett, and Maxim Gorky.[1]

The "brick sandwich" on the Bar-fly's table is in reference to a circumvention of Raines law, a prohibition-era law outlawing the sale of alcohol on Sunday except for in hotels (the setting of both The Entertainment and Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh). Some bar owners would mock the law by serving a clay brick between two slices of bread, thus satisfying the minimal legal requirement of serving food.

Cast list

In the world of Kentucky Route Zero, the play was first presented at the Buffalo Street Student Theatre on the evening of November 16, 1973 with the following cast:

Harry Esperanza Edgar Foy
Lawrence Slade Allen Vogel
Pearl Slade Sarah Wakefield
Rosa Slade Sydney Mueller
Evelyn Hickman Paula Graves
Bar-fly Uncredited

WordPlay premiere

The Entertainment debuted at the 2013 edition of WordPlay, a festival hosted by the Hand Eye Society in Toronto, Canada. The event, which took place on November 16, 2013, featured a recreation of the table set where guests could sit and play the VR version of the game.[2][3]

Beta Public performance

Beta Public, an event series at the Camden People's Theatre in London, hosted a production of The Entertainment on April 21, 2016.[4][5]

Gallery

References