AMERIVILLE


Humana Festival 2009 (Actors Theatre of
Louisville)
Written By: Universes (Steven Sapp, Mildred Ruiz,
Gamal Chasten, Ninja (aka- William Ruiz)
Director: Chay Yew
Dramaturg: Morgan Jenness
Choreographer: Millicent Johnnie
Set Design: Paul Owen
Lighting Design: Russell Champa
Sound Design: Ben Marcum
Video Design: Jason Czaja
Costume Design: Lorraine Venberg

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Ameriville
(For ATL Newsletter/Press - by: Sarah Lunnie)
How high is the water momma?
4 feet high and rising

Three years after Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf
coast, our memory betrays us. The storm drowned
thousands of city residents in their bedrooms and
attics, forced more than one million to flee for
safety, and put 80% of New Orleans under water.
But its images have receded from the covers of
our morning newspapers. News of levee breaches
and rooftop rescues no longer confronts us when
we turn on the television. The barrage of
disturbing revelations—shoddy engineering, bad
science, decades of irresponsible policy
converging in a lethal, man-made maelstrom—has
subsided. The country has moved on. But for the
displaced New Orleans residents still living in
FEMA trailers or scattered across America, the
storm continues.
Today the per capita murder rate in New Orleans
is the highest in the nation. The Road Home
Program, designed to compensate Louisiana
homeowners affected by Katrina and Rita, has
failed to address the state’s severe housing
shortage. Many fear that rebuilding efforts will
marginalize entire populations: gentrification
neatly disguised as renewal. And although the
Army Corps of Engineers is rebuilding the levees,
most experts agree that current plans are
frighteningly inadequate. In Katrina’s wake lies
an interminable sea of questions, about what and
whom we value and how we care for our home and
each other. In an era of fast news and short
attention spans, they are questions we would do
well to remember.
How
high is the water poppa?
8 feet high and rising

UNIVERSES (Gamal Abdel Chasten, Mildred
Ruiz-Sapp, William Ruiz aka Ninja and Steven
Sapp) didn’t set out to write a play about
Hurricane Katrina. The ensemble’s earlier work,
including Slanguage (which played at Actors in
2004) was more local in its scope, exploring the
rhythms, voices and landscapes of its members’
New York neighborhoods, with a unique fusion of
poetry, theatre, jazz, hip-hop, down-home blues
and Spanish boleros. With Ameriville, they pan
out to examine not only New Orleans, but the
country at large. According to co-founder, writer
and performer Steven Sapp, the project has been
in the works since before the storm hit.
“After Slanguage, we started to tour a lot,” Sapp
explains. “We went all around the country, and
the more we saw, the bigger our new pieces
became. Because what we were looking at was
bigger. In the beginning, we weren’t even trying
to write a new piece. Our initial thought was to
look at the state that the country was in, this
fear about everything. We were interested in
exploring the history of fear in America. And
then Katrina happened.”

The group wrote some small pieces responding to
the disaster, and performed them at venues in New
York City. The audience response was
overwhelming. After a show at the Apollo, the
group was approached by a couple that had just
relocated from New Orleans. The couple told
UNIVERSES they’d captured the experience of being
caught in the storm in a way no one else had, and
asked if any of the writers—Bronx and L.E.S.
natives—were from New Orleans. It was then, Sapp
says, they began to wonder if they’d found their
next big project.
“That’s when Mildred suggested we tackle Katrina.
And we thought, can we do that? Should we do
that? We knew it had to be about more than just
the storm. We knew if we were going to do this,
we had to do it our way.”
How
high is the water momma?
12 feet high and rising

On one level, Ameriville serves as a reminder to
the rest of the nation. “We’re a selective
country in terms of what we remember,” says Sapp.
“Since Katrina, we’ve had forest fires in
California and floods in Iowa. It’s like flipping
the channel: we move on. But if you go down to
New Orleans now, three years later, there are
sections that look like it just happened. It’s
chilling.” The play also seeks to expose deeply
ingrained social inequities that existed before
the levees toppled, but which came to national
attention only in the storm’s wake.
The writers feel a deep connection with the
people of New Orleans, built on the belief that
though circumstances vary, people are the same
everywhere. The title suggests that New Orleans
is America in microcosm, and, by extension, that
Katrina happened to all of us. Ameriville also
rejects regionalism, making an argument for a
more united, inclusive attitude toward
citizenship. “We should be looking at each other
as though this country were a village,” says
Sapp. “We’re one big, giant America here.
Wherever I go in this country, I’m an American
when I’m there, and I should feel like one.”
UNIVERSES recently travelled to New Orleans to
meet with survivors. They spoke with residents,
artists, and community figureheads, and got their
blessing to move forward with the project. The
conversations left UNIVERSES with a feeling of
great responsibility toward these people whose
stories and experience are Ameriville’s core, and
Katrina’s indelible legacy. Three years after
landfall, as debris clears and newsprint fades,
the survivors labor to repair what’s been broken;
to excavate pasts from the wreckage, and rebuild
their lives. Ameriville is both a monument to
their struggle and a call to action for the
nation: let us not forget what happened here.
How
high is the water momma?
20 feet high and rising
How high is the water poppa?
24 feet high and rising

—By: Sarah Lunnie (Actor Theatre of Louisville)
**********
AMERIVILLE was made possible by:
An Ensemble Theatre Collaborations Grant
from The Association of Performing Arts
Presenters (APAP)
A creation Fund Commission from The National
Performance Network
(In collaboration with New World Theater (MA);
Helena Presents (MT); and Dance Place (D.C.))
Development Lab Support from New York Theatre
Workshop
The Actors Theater of Louisville
(Humana Festival)
