Rock Wilk Wants to Play With You
May 3, 2011
We knew him when: Performance poet, playwright, producer, musician and mad original Rock Wilk has BROKE WIDE OPEN on an international scale — and he’s coming to a major stage festival, legit theater, public library, street corner or living room near you.
Some of our Fa(r)cebook Frenz send us breathless dispatches concerning cups of coffee and sunrises viewed from the deck. Others link to some article we first saw on The Onion in 2003, and even we have not been immune to the cutely photoshopped cat pix. But when Rock WILK comes a-postin’, it goes something like this:
Rock WILK is… out of the box renegade, not part of the club, without invitation & so he is throw his own party intriguing, THINK it PLAN it DO it FEARLESS, he just wants to play with you, share with you. Watch him fly. High. He won’t stop. He’s all a that…
Who is this Rock Wilk anyway? We’d endeavor to peg him as a sought-after singer and vocal arranger (for Nile Rodgers and Patti Labelle among many others), a composer of soundtrack music, a “spoken word sensei,” a producer, a playwright, a performance poet…and we get the feeling we’d run out of push pins long before we got to “a puppet, a pirate, a pawn and a king.”
Just precisely who “Rock WILK is” remains unresolved by Wilk himself, since the Boy from NYC has made matters of identity — the adoptee’s search for his birth parents; the artist’s almost obsessive need to constantly reinvent oneself — the tectonically tumultuous foundation for Broke Wide Open, the solo performance piece that began life circa 2007 as a self-released CD of intensely personal and/or autobiographical songs.
Several years after very small audiences here on the Upper Wet Side were first exposed to Wilk’s live renditions of BWO (at offbeat venues like the Crane House, The Showroom, SICA and even a suburban stripmall bookstore), the work has morphed from a songs-and-stories slideshow into a powerhouse presentation supercharged by word-high energy; a candidly confessional, relentlessly rhythmic state-of-the-state that sizzles with everything from a scared little kid’s search for a hand to hold, to an angry young runner’s attempts to stay a step ahead of the fury that both inspires and threatens to overtake him.
To call Broke Wide Open a “memoir” is to do it a disservice in this “me”-O.D. marketplace. Is it even a play? An epic poem NuMythology? A “road” novel or a rant? A gum, a candy, a breath mint? Not to be too terribly arch about it, Broke Wide Open might just be that Whole New Thing we didn’t even know we were looking for; that place we’re being drawn to for the first time as things warp and splinter, as our notions of how anything at all is conceived or created (or delivered, distributed, owned and consumed) gasp their last, and we try to figure out What Just Happened and what we’re supposed to do next, and wonder just what or who is going to come along and make perfect sense of (and in) this new context.
After honing his act to a Wilkinson-sword edge at venues like NYC’s Theater Lab, Wilk took Broke Wide Open on its first coast-to-coast tour this spring — and later this summer, he brings the stage production to Europe for a major festival engagement and possible world domination.
Until then, Rock Wilk continues to workshop new material in public parks and on moving subway cars — and rides the NJ Transit rails down the Shore, where he spends time in and around Asbury Park, and maintains a regular presence as the host of the monthly series of “iPoet” student-writer showcases at the Long Branch Free Public Library. On the afternoon of Saturday, May 14, Wilk will be joined by Springsteen singer (and solo songwriter) Lisa Lowell for an iPoet session that pairs the area’s newest poetic voices with some veteran vocalizers of the Shore music scene — and upperWETside caught up with the renegade somewhere outside the box.
So since the last time we talked you’ve gone nationwide; done a little Manifest Destiny with your one-man show. How’s it play out in the hinterlands? Are audiences in different towns reacting differently?
It was the first time that I really took the show outside my little area — New York, New Jersey, Boston, Philadelphia — basically the Northeast. I went to places like Chicago, Seattle — some of the Q and A’s last as long as two hours…very open, very raw…I’m givin’ people a forum to talk about the things they don’t always want to talk about.
I went to LA, where I happen to know a lot of people, and where I’d get all these industry people making comments about structure, transitions, things like that. I also went to Denver, which was quite a new experience for me.
How so?
The Denver audience was very conservative, mostly older crowd, probably all Republican…not at all the sort of crowd you see in New York or Asbury. But the response I got was almost religious…I didn’t change a thing about the show, and the reaction I got was for me a confirmation that I’m telling a story that resonates with any kind of audience. Something that’s not all about me; that’s transformed into something where people can see things about their own lives.
Kindly reiterate the exciting news that you shared with your email friends the other day.
I’m going to London, to do The Camden Fringe Festival — six shows between August 9th and 14th. Then in December I’m goin’ to Paris, at the invitation of a theater company there. They’re gonna have me do Broke Wide Open to a French-speaking audience, with subtitles.
And in between all this, you’re still finding the time to host the iPoet events at the Long Branch Library, where I can tell you everybody’s just thrilled to have you on board. The people from the Arts Council, the young kids, are all digging what you’re doing…you tie the room together, like the rug in THE BIG LEBOWSKI.
I love doing the iPoet thing…it’s something different every month, and I’m grateful that Robyn, Gabe and everyone keep askin’ me back. As far as the next event goes, I had planned to mix things up with song when I heard that it was going to be incorporating some singers and songwriters.
It wasn’t too long ago…2008 I think…when I saw you perform your show for the first time; a presentation with slide projections and recorded music inside the tiny parlor of the Stephen Crane House in Asbury.
At that time it was called Ma’Plej’ , and it was more of a songs and stories format, based on the album of songs called Broke Wide Open. And each time you saw it after that, I’m sure it had evolved into something different…that was a period of time when I was kind of traveling inside my own head; I didn’t know exactly how I wanted to tell this story, and a friend kind of pushed me in the direction of spoken word.
You were still known primarily as a musician, a singer, an arranger at that time. Was this more or less the first time you tapped into the spoken word thing? When you took the show to places like the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, did it still have the musical component, or did you just reinvent it altogether?
It wasn’t easy at first…I really humiliated myself in front of the audience. It can be very painful to perform in those clubs, but I figured that this pain was something I could use; just dive into it, learn from it, write about what I was going through.
Well, the show’s obviously morphed constantly and considerably through the years…I know you’ve always solicited feedback from the audiences, and I’m wondering if there ever was a time that somebody said or suggested something that really caused you to rethink what you’d been doing at that point…
I think Broke Wide Open was a very angry show at one point, and now it’s much more vulnerable, even funny. Nothing has ever really thrown a wrench into things, but I have to say that Broke Wide Open has been shaped to a great extent by a lot of the people who’ve come out to see it over the years — people from the adoption community especially.
The show is still about being adopted, being given away, living in foster homes…back in the 1960s, you had babies taken away from their mothers, kids placed in foster care with no way of ever connecting with their birth mothers.
The earliest version of the show pretty much ended with me talking about how I’m grateful for my adoptive parents. I’d get people coming up to me, telling me that I wasn’t happy, that this wasn’t a happy ending, and that I should be taking a stand and finding my mother. That’s something I’ve always wrestled with. I mean, what if my mother’s some racist asshole; what if I find out about some disease I’m just waiting to get?
When I performed it at The Showroom, this one adopted guy brought his father; you could see he was very moved by it…another guy wrote online that the show made him pledge to call his father every day, to tell him that he loved him.
I’ve had directors and other industry people try to tell me what to do with the show; try to change it something that it wasn’t — but you have to understand that even if I make one little change, it affects the whole work. It’s not just one word; it could be ten pages.
In a way you’re still just getting started with BROKE WIDE OPEN, but what happens after that? Do you have a sequel in the works?
I’m working on another play — it’s about Sean Bell, who you might remember from a news story a few years back, and it’s based on a poem which I performed at the last iPoet in Long Branch. It’s not a monologue this time; it’ll have a few characters, although I may wind up doing it as a one-man show with different parts to play.
One of the things I’ve had to teach myself is the theater scene; who the directors are, and who might be the best director to work with. I’ve been watching a lot of movies, studying those directors also — I like the Coen Brothers a lot, and I especially love Spike Lee, and the way he tells his stories.
One of the things I’m most impressed with is how you’ve engineered your show to really work in any available space…a black-box theater, a bookstore, a coffeehouse, and I even remember you doing it out on the street in Asbury Park. How big and how small are you willing to go with this thing in its current state?
I live in Washington Heights, and I rehearse in a little park there. I’ve had people stop and watch and listen while I run through the show…one group of people sat there for the entire two hours, and stayed to talk about it afterward.
I definitely think Broke Wide Open is Broadway worthy. It’s something that’s good enough for the Taper Forum, for Steppenwolf in Chicago. It’s something that can hold a big audience, and it’s something I can do on a street corner for passersby. I’ve even done it for a friend and her daughter, the entire show, in their living room.
So that stands as the most intimate performance you’ve ever done?
No, that would be when I went to my parents’ graves and did it there, just for them. I made some changes to the show after I did that, so you can say that they had their own contribution to make to it also.
So yes, everybody who’s ever seen Broke Wide Open has been part of the evolution of the work. It’s a cliche, but it’s all about the journey. I want us to do this together — to be part of this wonderful shared experience.
A shared experience, maybe, but one in which you yourself are still doing all the heavy lifting.
This is hard work. It absolutely is, and if you’re not workin’ like I’m workin’, you ain’t doin’ nothin’. I’m my own promoter, booking agent, tour manager, whatever it takes — there are no shortcuts, and when something positive goes your way, you really feel that you earned it.
I’ve been called a “shameless self promoter” — sometimes in a friendly way; other times by people who are jealous of what I’ve managed to do — but I’m squeezing every drop out of everything I am with my work. For the first time I feel I’m doin’ exactly what I want to be doing…I feel filled up when I do this work. Like I’m not just takin’ up space; I’m contributing something.
Tom Chesek - Upper WET Side
(May 3, 2011)