Pitt Theatre Production ‘Somewhere’ on Climate Collapse & Butterflies Was Also Sustainably Produced

Pitt Theatre’s newest production is sustainable in topic and production

The key to using recycled materials in theater is to “take what you’ve got, make it work and make it pretty,” Ricky Lyle Campbell said.  Campbell, the Department of Theatre Arts costume manager, and his students constructed almost 200 butterflies out of discarded plastic cups and bottles. He affectionately refers to his classroom as the “butterfly factory.”

Those butterflies are just one example of sustainable practices used in the production of “Somewhere,” debuting Saturday at Pitt’s Charity Randall Theatre. Set in the not-too-distant future during an era of climate collapse, the play chronicles two protagonists’ journeys to track the world’s last monarch butterflies as they migrate to the west coast.

For director Ricardo Vila-Roger, staging a play about environmental collapse while eschewing eco-friendly practices would be hypocritical. Vila-Roger posed the question to his team, “What happens if we try to purchase as few things as possible?”

Though past Theatre Arts productions have used some elements of recycling or repurposing materials, “Somewhere” is the first play in Vila-Roger’s memory to integrate sustainable practices in every aspect of the production — from altering old costumes and repurposing stage platforms to creating props from discarded materials. Vila-Roger even sourced dead branches from Pitt’s grounds crew to use on stage.

The shift to using sustainable practices has been a long time coming for the theater world.  Because theaters often lack storage space, they sometimes dispose of entire sets and costumes at a show’s conclusion.

To help his production team shift to a sustainable model, Vila-Roger consulted Green New Theatre, a document inspired by the Green New Deal that helps theater-makers in the age of climate crisis enact sound eco-practices.

Released in 2020 by artist collaborative Groundwater Arts, Green New Theatre is a call to arms. The authors wrote in the introduction, “The arts sector also has an important role to play in shifting the narratives about the climate crisis. While this is important, it is not enough for our industry to tell the stories of change. We must change ourselves and our ways of working.”

Get tickets to see “Somewhere” from Saturday, Oct. 16 to Friday, Oct. 22 in the Charity Randall Theatre.

Read the original Pittwire story authored by Nichole Faina