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Photo courtesy of UAPresents
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"Charles Victor Romeo," or
"CVR" as it is commonly referred to, reenacts
the experiences recorded on crashing airplanes'
black boxes. The show is recommended for mature
audiences and runs through Sunday at Muse, 516
N. Fifth Ave.
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By
Graig
Uhlin
Arizona
Daily Wildcat
Thursday Apr. 18, 2002
Actual cockpit voice recorder transcripts become
subject matter for docudrama
Media coverage of large-scale disasters - of airplane
crashes, for instance - has a standard way of
proceeding. An item runs on the six o'clock news -
images of flaming wreckage played again and again, shots
of on-lookers crying and recounting their experiences -
with a brief remark as to the cause (often "mechanical
failure" or "human error").
In short, our experience of disaster is often
sensationalized and dehumanized, served to us as
spectacle. But the story of what really happened, of
what happened in the cockpit in the moments before a
crash, almost always gets lost.
Enter "Charlie Victor Romeo," a theatrical docudrama
that strips away the sensationalism of these disasters
and presents its audience with the gritty truth.
The play, now running in Tucson, re-enacts the
transcripts of the cockpit voice recorders of six
real-life airline emergencies, in order to bring to
light what the media does not show.
"The actual explanation or the detail of what
happened is the least important thing (in media
coverage) and tends to be simplified," said Bob Berger,
one of the show's three creators.
The idea for the experimental drama, often simply
called "CVR," grew out of a July '99 conversation in a
New York City bookstore between Berger and Irving
Gregory - another of the play's creators - about the
exploitation of sex and violence in reality programming
on television.
During the course of the discussion, which Berger
said was "loud and interrupting with the flow of
business at the bookstore," Berger used the nearby books
- a coffee table book on invasive surgical procedures,
for instance - to make his point. One of the books was
on aviation emergencies.
"I said, 'That might be an interesting subject to
create a play from,'" Berger said. "So, we left the
bookstore with a bunch of research material."
In selecting from the hundreds of cockpit voice
recorder transcripts, the production team read over the
course of their research, Berger said they were looking
for three main qualities.
First, the emergencies had to be interesting from an
aviation perspective. They didn't want them all to be
the same basic problem. They didn't want to incorporate
too much aviation jargon so audiences could understand
the emergencies.
And, Berger said, the play's creators wanted to mix
well-known disasters with less familiar ones.
Third, they wanted each emergency to seem analogous
to people's everyday lives.
"We wanted people to see situations that they have
been in themselves," Berger said.
To this end, the production, in its staging and
approach to the subject matter, has been focused toward
the human experience of these emergencies in a way that
does not replicate the same sensationalizing that the
play is meant to critique.
"The thing that surprised us the most about the
actual material is what the people do in these
circumstances - the incredible effort in the face of
disaster," Berger said. "The focus is on the way they
are managing or not managing what is going on around
them (during an emergency)."
Further, the production does not try to portray the
actual people involved in these emergencies. The sexes
of the real-life victims were intentionally switched.
Accents were dropped. The idea, Berger said, was to
abstract these people from their cultural and personal
backgrounds so the audience would be able to identify
with the situation.
"(We wanted to) get people to try to imagine
themselves in that situation," Berger said. "That
someone might have had an Alabama accent does not inform
the emotional underpinnings of what's going on."
Working on this production has not made Berger fear
flying, though. Instead, it has deepened his
appreciation for it.
"I can't get on an airplane without paying attention
a little bit more to the people who work there," Berger
said. "They're not bus drivers; they're not waitresses.
"I think the audience of 'CVR' sees that."
Berger said "CVR" has received a positive reception
both from the aviation community and from Tucsonans -
even going up against "Phantom of the Opera." He said
the play doesn't speak down to its audience.
"It's an incredibly deep and complicated subject and
yet has that dramatic quality that is an emotional
experience and a cathartic experience," Berger said. "I
think that people are challenged by this in a way that
is a very positive experience."
"CVR" runs through Sunday at Muse, 516 N. Fifth Ave.
For tickets and show times, call 621-3341.