Neal Medlyn took up residence at The Kitchen this past weekend with his badass show Wicked Clown Love. Based on the Detroit rap duo Insane Clown Posse (ICP) and their followers, known as Juggalos and Juggalettes, Medlyn performed with his two main sidekicks, Farris Craddock and Carmine Covelli, and a cast of Juggalos. This is a continuation of Medlyn’s performance work in which he takes pop music icons, such as Beyonce, Britney Spears, or Phil Collins, and creates an entire piece based on them. ICP provides ready-made mythology and rituals based on their highly developed sub-cult following. Medlyn serves it all up: lunatic clown aesthetic, Faygo showers (ICP drink of choice that’s constantly sprayed on fans and themselves), and recreating their yearly music festival gathering in the woods complete with wrestling and other debaucherous activity. Everything in the world of ICP happens in The Dark Carnival, a space in which the battle between good and evil is proselytized. It’s a space centered upon male bonding and shared knowledge of rituals. At one point in the show Medlyn creates a safe circle for any member to step up and share about anything they need to get off their chest or throw out some rhymes, but first he purifies the space with a spray can of Old Spice. Breaking character, Medlyn diverged into stories of his early 20’s in Texas, like writing hot checks at Wal-Mart in the middle of the night while high. The structure of his work is very closely tied to that of performance artist Ann Liv Young. They both share a love for singing over other people’s songs, using those songs as a story telling means to push along a narrative, and they break into highly confessional personal monologues that implore the audience to feel a close connection to their lives. Half the performance is based on watching Medlyn be a karaoke king in his own show. His persona is extremely convincing and he’s actually a good rapper. Whether you can get into his topic or not, the story he’s telling through ICP is one of camaraderie and the human need to connect with one another. Aggressive and nihilistic at first the story gives way to transformation and miracles. Faygo showers are given the power to turn energy from negative to positive, clearing away the past to give way to the future, that sounds like a good ol’ baptism to me. What becomes clear by the end is that the carnival is a space to encounter God, to make a choice between good and evil, and to participate in a community. Through the story telling structure of the six Joker Cards, you are lead through a personal and social battle of whether you can judge your moral behavior by the ultimate end point of entry to heaven or hell. ICP has oscillated from confirming and denying the intentionality of their “God message”. Medlyn made it very clear in one of his monologues that he wanted to talk to us about negation that night. Having vaguely encountering ICP culture in high school, Medlyn’s performance creates a safe space at which to be a second hand voyeur of his re-enactments of Juggalo behavior. I was only too thrilled at the real life Juggalos in the house. 
My review in Dossier Journal of Neal Medlyn’s Wicked Clown Love at The Kitchen