{"id":19746,"date":"2019-08-19T00:41:53","date_gmt":"2019-08-19T07:41:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/Becomeimmersed.com\/?p=19746"},"modified":"2020-01-29T08:44:15","modified_gmt":"2020-01-29T16:44:15","slug":"welcome-to-respite-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/becomeimmersed.com\/welcome-to-respite-review\/","title":{"rendered":"Severance Theory: Welcome to Respite – An Uneasy Homecoming"},"content":{"rendered":"

I am lying in my bed. Mom tucked me in just a few moments ago and both she and my father wished me good night before leaving the room. But there is no sleep to be had here. First, even as a child I can read the tension between my parents. But worse, \u201cThe Shadow\u201d has arrived. And it has something to ask me.<\/p>\n

I\u2019m in the middle of experiencing The Severance Theory: Welcome to Respite.<\/em> It\u2019s the first entry of a 4-chapter immersive story by CoAct Productions<\/a> (creators of last year\u2019s The Sideshow<\/em><\/a>) and I\u2019m currently living within the character of Alex. I describe my experience that way because that\u2019s how the creators of the show have written this story – the audience member steps into the central persona that everyone else circles around.<\/p>\n

But the experience doesn\u2019t begin in childhood. Audience members first step into Alex as an adult who has just inherited their mother\u2019s home after her death. A quick meeting with the realtor (performed with just the right level of professional insincerity by Danielle Levesque) leads to the audience member being left alone with a backpack full of child Alex\u2019s belongings. Most important to those belongings is a message about the past, one that actually sends the audience back to that childhood age.<\/p>\n

\"Severance<\/p>\n

It\u2019s at this point that Welcome to Respite<\/em> shows its greatest strengths. Kelly Pierre appears as the previously mentioned mother and literally envelops you into the reality that she creates. Pierre inhabits the mother role so completely that it practically becomes real, making it easy for the audience to respond as the child they should be. If the show were entirely<\/em> this interaction, it would stand as one of the better interaction-driven experiences this year. But there is a deeper story going on here and it begins to show itself in subtle ways as the Alex\u2019s father shows up. As the dad, Payden Ackerman brings a gentle and genial nature to the role while also somehow managing to include a beautiful nuance of a frightened, worried parent hidden beneath the smiles.<\/p>\n

Between the two parents, a dark secret rises within the show. There are signs, hints and echoes dropped constantly through the evening. When the audience-as-Alex is asked about a burn mark or the parents edge too close to a well-worn argument between themselves, it becomes clear that something<\/em> has happened before this night, something that has hurt this entire family\u2019s existence. But what was it?<\/p>\n

In Welcome to Respite<\/em>, answers aren\u2019t easy to find. Both parents ask Alex questions constantly – but they are questions that we can\u2019t answer, that we don\u2019t have the information to answer. This strategy forces the audience to either say they don\u2019t know or make up an answer on the spot. Many immersive productions use this sort of strategy to help audience members invest in the story, because once an audience member answers a question with specifics, they become more focused in the interactions. Here, however, the strategy is used for a different purpose. The parents ask questions that have a \u2018correct\u2019 answer and the fact that we can\u2019t give them that answer becomes part of the story.<\/em> Our inability to recall events and correct answers is, itself, part of what is happening to this family. It\u2019s part of what is happening to Alex.<\/p>\n

\"Severance<\/p>\n

The word \u201crespite\u201d is defined in two major ways:<\/p>\n