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"Meat Suit" Explores Motherhood's Wild Ride
26 Feb
Summary
- Aya Ogawa's "Meat Suit" uses clowning to explore motherhood's perplexities.
- The play features actors in distorted bodysuits, reflecting bodily changes.
- It dramatizes the profound sense of flux and identity shifts in parenthood.

Aya Ogawa's new play, "Meat Suit," delves into the complex realities of motherhood with a unique theatrical approach. The production utilizes an episodic structure, physical comedy, and a cast of actors who embody clown archetypes, allowing for intimate contemplation of profound, often insoluble, aspects of parenting.
The play features actors in distinctive, distorted bodysuits designed by Jian Jung, which accentuate the grotesque and bizarre, drawing from the French clowning style of Bouffon. This visual element underscores the raw, physical transformations and bodily fluids associated with childbirth and early parenthood.
"Meat Suit" captures the disorienting experience of new motherhood, portraying scenarios where the sheer overwhelm and identity shifts are dramatized. It explores the constant flux and root-level changes parenthood instigates, bringing these internal shifts to the surface through poignant and often humorous sketches. The production highlights the profound sense of loss and transformation that mothers often undergo, showing moments of a child's growth from infancy to adulthood in rapid succession. The play concludes with the ensemble singing about uncertainty and self-knowledge, acknowledging the shared experience of mothers.




