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What do you do with material like this? Apparently anything you want. Lacking characters or stage direction, Psychosis is an openhearted submission to any theater company choosing to tackle it. Having understood this, everyone involved in the Naked Stage production runs wild. There is nothing in their work that is not explosive. This is true of the actors — Katherine Amadeo's "The Patient," Erin Joy Schmidt's "The Doctor," and Kim Ehly's "The Lover" are fully fleshed and bottomlessly weird — but it is also true of the artists and technicians, who, in most productions, would go unrecognized. Sevim Abaza's lighting design is a marvel, a creation with an aesthetic all its own that demands contemplation and appreciation beyond anything Kane has done. When The Patient, Kane's onstage surrogate, stands at a sink and cuts her arm, her body is lit from the bottom up by deep blue light, as though there were a small, sad sun in the basin. As visual art, this is a moment worth looking at in a play that is full of moments like it.
Antonio Amadeo's set is as jarring as the lights. Its focal point is a bed, propped up at an angle that is useful to audience members seeking a better glimpse of the girl-on-girl action destined to take place there, but probably hell on the ladies' backs. Part of the stage becomes a big, industrial shower, the kind of place you might go to get deloused or Zykloned. This area later becomes a small, claustrophobic room in what looks like an asylum. Everywhere, upside-down furniture is suspended from the ceiling. For a moment, Kate Amadeo's hair is whipped violently back by a wind that must come from a fan hidden among the TV sets and hampers up there. There is no reason for this — nothing in the script demands it — but it seems right. Naked Stage has made Kane's circumscribed, hopelessly alienated mind immersive. It lets us in.
The net result is a production that explores death from the wrong end and actually seems to tell us something — even though the script often sounds like something posted on a MySpace blog by a 14-year-old emo chick. This is a remarkable flaw for a play that might be the most exciting thing to happen to South Florida theater this year. To reconcile the apparent paradox, it seems there are two questions that demand answers. The first is this: Was Sarah Kane full of shit?
She did kill herself, which goes a long way toward proving she really was as miserable as Psychosis makes her seem. And even if Kane's suicide was just the grand finale of a self-involved depression drama she secretly loved and encouraged, which I think is possible, you can only fake misery for so long. Eventually, it becomes real or you give up. So figure Psychosis is totally honest. This naturally leads one to ponder another big question: Are people this self-absorbedly depressed capable of producing decent art?