We’ve all heard it—an errant cell phone ringing in a public place. But what might happen if you answered a stranger’s phone? That’s what members of the Department of Theatre explore in their new production of Dead Man’s Cell Phone, a play by playwright Sarah Ruhl.
Ruhl’s work tells the story of a character named Jean after she answers—you guessed it—a dead man’s ringing cell phone, following her as she dives deeper into his mysterious life. The production runs through Saturday, Oct. 29 in the Studio Theatre.
“Sarah Ruhl writes these wild rides that can be very surprising for the audience, and takes them on an absurd journey that ends up being surprisingly moving,” said director Jonathan Carr, assistant teaching professor in the College of Arts, Media and Design.
A New York Times review of the play when it was first staged off-Broadway reads, “[Ruhl’s] theme in Dead Man’s Cell Phone is the paradoxical ability of the title device (and the people who use it) both to unite and isolate.”
“Of [Ruhl’s] plays that I’ve read before, this is one that touches most closely on where we are today,” Carr said. “It’s about how we—in this digital age, where we’re supposed to be more connected than ever but find ourselves without real connection—create meaning in all that. And the play goes right after that directly. Instead of having the main character meet a person, she meets a cell phone, and through her journey discovers people who have lost their own sense of what life is.”