A Historic Site Transforms Into An Immersive Venue

Jeff Mousseau and Paul Ricciardi are the co-directors of the Ancram Opera House, and they have brought some inventive theatrical performances to the venue’s intimate stage.

But for their next production, they’ve traded that tiny space for a massive landscape: the Olana State Historic Site in Hudson, N.Y. It was the home and studio of Hudson River School painter Frederic Edwin Church, and he is the subject of “Performing Olana,” an original play written by Darrah Cloud and directed by Mousseau and Ricciardi.

Mousseau and Cloud were tight-lipped about the play’s plot during a recent interview, summarizing it simply as following “a day in the life of Frederic Church.” 

The family-friendly piece draws inspiration from Church’s art, letters, family life and the Olana landscape, and it falls somewhere between creative nonfiction and historic fiction.

The audience will follow the actors — Alexandra Angeloch, Eliot Boyd Bailey, James Occhio, Sam Rebelein, Lia Russell-Self and Anne Undeland — around the site as the narrative unfolds. Participants can expect to walk about three quarters of a mile through meadows, barns, an orchard and more.

As for how this project came to fruition, Mousseau said it stemmed from a Halloween event he crafted at Olana a few years ago. 

“It whetted our appetite for a deeper, fuller, more expansive experience,” he said. “Amy Hufnagel, Olana’s director of education, came to us with an open assignment to make a performance that allows visitors to experience the site in innovative, different ways.”

Mousseau and Ricciardi approached Cloud to write the play.

“I love the Ancram Opera House, so I would have said yes to anything,” she said. “When it happened to be about Church and Olana, I jumped in because I was an art major before I was a writing major. I loved Church and Olana already.”

They spent the winter months in Olana’s basement reading Church’s letters. 

“We had a lot of intense conversations without writing a word. Who was this man? Why did he build this house?” Cloud said. “I became obsessed with his family life. Jeff wanted to go out into the land to not be static. It evolved out of our conversations.”

“We are choosing specific locations on the landscape because of what people can experience and see,” Mousseau said. “It’s the most amazing set you can ever have.”

 

“Performing Olana” will be performed at the Olana State Historic Site at 5720 Route 9G in Hudson, N.Y., on Sept. 22 at 6 p.m. and Sept. 23 to 24 at 2,
4 and 6 p.m. For tickets, go to www.olana.org.

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