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Gone Missing (musical)

Gone Missing
Music Michael Friedman
Lyrics Michael Friedman
Book Steve Cosson, from interviews conducted by Damian Baldet, Trey Lyford, Jennifer Morris, Brian Sgambati, Alison Weller, Colleen Werthmann, Quincy Tyler Bernstein, Matthew Francis

Gone Missing is a 2003 musical by The Civilians, an investigative theater company in New York City. This piece of musical theatre is composed of interviews conducted by the company on the subject of loss. The play engages with individuals who have lost everything from jewelry to technology to a black Gucci pump, investigating both how things get lost, and how the impact of that loss can extend far beyond the meaning of the object itself. Gone Missing was written and directed by Steve Cosson from interviews by the company, with music and lyrics by Michael Friedman, with additional text for “Interview with Dr. Palinurus” by Peter Morris. Gone Missing made its Canadian premier on May 12, 2011 by Southpointe Academy in British Columbia.

Gone Missing began with interviews about things that were lost and never found. The show does not answer any questions or purport theories about loss but rather presents a wide variety of human stories and emotions through this specific type of common experience. When writing about what impact he wanted to have with Gone Missing, stage director and writer Steve Cosson said

“I wanted to learn if the mechanics of loss and grief were significantly different in other people. Or do we instead all just have different names and objects tagged to the various holes in hearts, with the nature of the holes themselves being more or less the same? And is there a way that we as a society remember lost things can tell us something about how we live now? Could these holes somehow make a map of absences that would describe the territory that encompasses both ‘all there is’ and ‘all that might have been?’”

The Civilians use documentary methods to create theater pieces. Like many of The Civilians’ productions, Gone Missing is based on interviews with individuals conducted by the cast. The company did not record the interviews, and the actors did not write them down until after the interview was over. Indeed, Dan Balcazo notes in his Theatermania review of "Gone Missing", "Certain sections appear to be verbatim transcripts of interviews, while others seem more fictionalized, or at the very least exaggerated for comic effect". This variegated effect is a trademark of The Civilians' style which incorporates the subjective, the ambiguous, and the unexpected.

Gone Missing uses the transcripts from the interviews as verbatim dialogue. The bits of dialog are juxtaposed to bring out similarities and highlight differences in the things people lose and how they deal with them. For example, several interviewees talk about rings that they have lost, and these excerpts woven together in one scene. Other voices included are that of a pet psychic, a Disposeaphobic, a social worker, and a police man who finds lost body parts. Other topics that the overarching subject raises include that of Atlantis, and how it was considered by Plato to be a kind of lost paradise, and Sigmund Freud's theory about subconscious intentional misplacing of objects.


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