Before entering the theater, audience members receive a brief warning: there will be two gunshots.
When the lights come up, the guns are already present. Tucked inside an elegantly tailored overcoat hanging above the stage, they remain visible reminders of a fate waiting to unfold. As relationships unravel and tensions mount, the pistols hover over the production like a Greek chorus of doom — silent, yet inescapable.
This year's opening production of Huichang Theatre Season 004 is Hedda Gabler, Henrik Ibsen's 1891 masterpiece, directed by American theater director Travis Preston.
The story remains familiar. Hedda, the daughter of a military general, finds herself trapped in a suffocating marriage to the uninspiring scholar George Tesman. When her former lover, Ejlert Lovborg, reappears with a manuscript that promises to secure his future, Hedda's jealousy and desire for control set a tragedy in motion. She destroys the manuscript, encourages him toward a "beautiful" death using one of her late father's pistols, and ultimately becomes ensnared by Judge Brack, who discovers her role in the affair. Cornered and humiliated, she turns the second pistol on herself.