Pulse logo
Pulse Region

High School 'Alien' Production Wins Internet Raves

High School 'Alien' Production Wins Internet Raves
High School 'Alien' Production Wins Internet Raves

And now, to this canon, you might add “Alien.”

A New Jersey high school has found itself the unexpected recipient of online acclaim and viral attention for its recent stage production of “Alien,” the 1979 science-fiction thriller.

“Alien: The Play,” presented last weekend by the drama club of North Bergen High School, starred a cast of eight students in the film roles originally played by Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skerritt, John Hurt and Ian Holm.

Whereas the movie had a budget in the range of about $10 million, “Alien: The Play” had costumes, props and set designs made mostly from donated and recycled materials.

Both the film and the stage adaptation feature a nightmarish extraterrestrial designed by artist H.R. Giger — played, in this production, by a high school student.

“Alien: The Play” is the brainchild of Perfecto Cuervo, an English teacher at the school and the moderator of its drama club, and Steven Defendini, an art teacher there.

Last year, the two teachers worked together on a student staging of “Night of the Living Dead,” the George Romero zombie movie. This past summer, they started to plan a follow-up.

As Cuervo recalled their conversation, he said, “Do you think we can do ‘Alien’ as a play?” It seemed to require few sets, he said: “We have a spaceship. We have a planet. It could be handled.”

Defendini said he answered, “I don’t know how to do that. I don’t know if we can do that. But we’re going to do that.”

The original “Alien” was directed by Ridley Scott and written by Dan O’Bannon. Released by Twentieth Century Fox, it is a claustrophobic horror film about the crew of a small outer-space vessel that encounters an unwelcome, nonhuman stowaway that has come to be known as the xenomorph. (Spoiler alert: The story doesn’t end well for most of them.)

The film was a substantial hit, critically and commercially, that burrowed itself deep in the cultural consciousness and started a decadeslong film franchise.

Cuervo, who directed the students’ version, said he spent about a month and a half adapting it from the film. Casting took place in November; the crucial role of Ripley (the Sigourney Weaver character) went to Gabriella Delacruz, a senior at the school.

Delacruz, who had been in the school’s “Night of the Living Dead,” said that she was proud to carry on the feminist tradition that Ripley represents.

“She’s a female character who’s really portrayed as the hero at the end,” she said. “She isn’t the damsel in distress. She got to be a badass, if I’m allowed to say that.”

Xavier Perez, a sophomore, was chosen to play the xenomorph. “When we did the casting,” Cuervo said, “there was one person that showed up — a tall, skinny kid. I told him, ‘Well, I guess you’re it. You’ve got the part.’ ”

Rehearsals began in December, while Defendini, the play’s art director, oversaw the creation of exotic terrains and spaceship interiors, trying as best as possible to reproduce the aesthetic of the film.

“Some of the walls are covered in egg crates, not because it was the cheapest solution but because it was the most authentic,” Defendini said.

Using a variety of materials, some of which were donated by Tom Carroll Scenery, a stage production and design shop in Jersey City, the teachers estimated the total cost of the play was under $3,500.

The performances relied on an additional six student crew members, plus another five to 10 who helped operate sound boards and lights and supply other special effects.

“We had four kids on laptops, doing sound effects, ambient noises and alien noises,” Cuervo said. “We used a lot of the band kids, because they know how to play instruments, and they were really good with the cues.”

Though the original “Alien” movie is about to turn 40 years old, Defendini said its characters still resonated with his teenage students, who know its monsters from video games, pop-cultural lore and recent sequels like “Alien: Covenant.”

“We had kids in the crew who knew the specific genesis and species of the xenomorph,” he said. “What gender it is, what planet it’s from. Everything you could know.”

Asked if the drama club had sought official permission to present the play, Cuervo said, “Our main goal was really just to put on a great play for the kids, just get them out, stage front.”

(The Fox film studio was acquired earlier this month by The Walt Disney Co. A press representative for Disney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)

“Alien: The Play” has drawn widespread praise on social media; an official promotional Twitter account for the “Alien” franchise said, “We are impressed! 40 years and still going strong …” and “Bravo!”

Comedian Patton Oswalt wrote, “This is fantastic. Blows my high school’s adaptation of PINK FLAMINGOS out of the water.”

An online trailer has received more than 130,000 views on YouTube, and the production was covered on news sites like The Verge and The AV Club.

Defendini pointed out that a tweet about “Alien: The Play,” posted by Leslye Headland, a co-creator of the Netflix series “Russian Doll,” had been liked by Joss Whedon, writer and director of “The Avengers.”

That, he said, was sufficient validation for the students.

“For them, that’s enough, to be acknowledged by their favorite movie director,” Defendini said. “For a bunch of high school kids, I can’t imagine what it’s like to see how much recognition they’re getting for seven months of hard work.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Subscribe to receive daily news updates.

Next Article