THE POWER OF LIVE PERFORMANCE TO ADDRESS THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC

Commercial fishing, opiate addiction, Moby Dick play out in Rockland premier of Blues Opera

Fri, 08/27/2021 - 5:00pm

Story Location:
639 Main Street
Rockland, ME
United States

    ROCKLAND — Never Leaving This Boat—Fragments of a Blues Opera, a provocative and challenging new work by Maine-based playwright Michael Gorman will premiere during National Recovery Month, Saturday, September 11-12, 2021, at Steel House Amphitheater, 639 Main Street, in Rockland.

    The performance charts the rise and fall of a young commercial fisherman through the intrusion of addiction and explores the role of myth and storytelling as both sustaining and destructive forces in a Northeast coastal fishing community.

    Using Melville’s 19th-century monster as a metaphor for the modern plague of opioid addiction, Gorman explores the ruinous effects of the opiate epidemic on the commercial fishing industry in a tale that stretches across generations and ancients— lost mariners, lost souls, lost lives.

    Never Leaving This Boat will tap into the deep ritualistic healing power of the blues — incorporating original live music and song, spoken word, performance, community participation, and testimonials — to restore connections lost or frayed by the compound crises of the opiate epidemic and COVID.

    “Now, more than ever, the time seems right to come together as a community to celebrate the spirit of the blues and the inspiring strength of human connection in the wake of adversity,” said Forty Hour Club, in a news release.

    The production is part of Gorman’s on-going project “Chasing The New White Whale— Harpooning Addiction” — a performance-based art & advocacy model created by the playwright and his production company, The Forty Hour Club. FHC is a collective of independent artist’s, contractors, builders, and supporters dedicated to bringing awareness to the issue of opiate addiction in the commercial fishing community of Maine and New England.

    Through the use of metaphor and the sharing of personal stories by members of the community, the productions seek to create an open forum for discussion around critical issues in the community. The ultimate goal is to propel constructive change and help build resiliency in the face of challenges such as the opiate crisis.

    National Recovery Month is a National observance held every September to educate Americans about substance use disorder and treatment.

    Tickets and information at: www.fortyhourclub.com

    WHEN: Saturday, September 11, at 1 p.m. and 4 p.m.; and Sunday, September 12, at 3 p.m. (includes a community talk-back)

    WHERE: Steel House Amphitheater—639 Main Street, Rockland, ME