
A joyfully queer fantasia that draws on jazz music and operatic form to reimagine the last hours of Socrates as an ecstatic celebration.
The latest work from playwright Taylor Mac and composer Matt Ray takes us to ancient Athens on the eve of the death of famous philosopher Socrates. Sentenced to die for corrupting the youth (by having sex with them), Socrates decides to spend his remaining hours doing what he loves: engaging in philosophical debate about the true meaning of virtue. And singing songs. And dancing. And just, you know, hanging out. What follows is a musical-theatrical riff on philosophical history, complete with a Plato who assiduously but inaccurately writes it all down, implying that what's most essential in life, as in theater, are the unwritable moments of joyous communion. In other words, "the hang."
Matt Ray is a New York-based pianist, singer, songwriter, arranger, and music director. His arrangements have been called "wizardly" (Time Out New York) and "ingenious" (New York Times), and his piano playing "classic" (New York Times). For his work on Taylor Mac's show A 24-Decade History of Popular Music, he won the 2017 Kennedy Prize for Drama Inspired by American History. Notable live performances include playing at Carnegie Hall with Kat Edmonson, the Hollywood Bowl with reggae legend Burning Spear, Lincoln Center with Joey Arias, and shows in Paris and the UK with Justin Vivian Bond. He co-wrote songs for and performed in Bridget Everett's one-hour Comedy Central special Gynecological Wonder as well as Everett's hit show Rock Bottom. He also music directed Taylor Mac's Obie award-winning play The Lily's Revenge. Ray has released three albums as a leader: We Got It! (2001), Lost In New York (2006); and Songs For the Anonymous (2013).
"The Hang feels like a celebration of theater itself--a paean to collaboration and company, to rampant beauty and to the necessary balm of gathering together." --The New York Times
"The most daring aspect of The Hang is also its most heartening: About a man's death from hemlock poisoning, it is unfailingly joyous, and never takes itself too seriously. It is a radical declaration of queer frivolity in our severe age, and it restores my faith that there is still room for dangerous ideas and weird people in the New York theater." --TheaterMania
"At a time when self-restraint and simple good taste can seem in desperately short supply, Mac continues to be that rare artist who proves that sometimes too much is exactly enough." --New York Stage Review