I took off my footwear to enter the theater house. My eyeglasses, too. The footwear had been a part of the ritual, but it surely turned out that An Ark, an augmented actuality theater piece showcased at The Shed in New York Metropolis, makes use of Magic Leap 2 glasses. And people do not work with my prescription. I placed on contact lenses within the lavatory earlier than the present.
In a carpeted room with dozens of individuals seated within the spherical, I placed on the tethered pair of AR glasses. So did everybody else. We sat collectively whereas holographic performers, together with famed actor Ian McKellen, manifested round us.
An Ark is an experiment, billed as “the primary play created for blended actuality.” I’ve seen AR experiences in immersive showcases earlier than this that I would name performs of a form. However the almost 50-minute run time of An Ark might be the longest I’ve repeatedly been in a Magic Leap 2 headset. By the tip, the glasses felt a bit heat on my nostril. I used to be able to take them off.
My colleague Bridget Carey and I each attended An Ark, operating at The Shed till April 4, on an especially chilly day a number of weeks in the past. I am nonetheless fascinated with it. The expertise was haunting. Emotional, however chilly. It felt like we had been current at a stay theater occasion, and but there have been no stay actors there in any respect.
Hallways and partitions invite you into the expertise at An Ark, getting ready you for how one can placed on the headset.
What does this imply for the way forward for bodily theater? I actually don’t desire stay actors to go away. I do not suppose that is the intention of this play, both. The entire expertise is offered as a memorial-like meditation on the liminal house after demise.
4 (digital) chairs seem in a semicircle in entrance of me, and one after the other, the volumetrically captured actors seem. McKellen, Golda Rosheuvel, Arinzé Kene and Rosie Sheehy are hypnotizing as presences that really feel like they’re sitting proper throughout from me. It is the attention contact, as Bridget says to me later. Additionally, it is the sense of how they’re all battling on your consideration.
My subject of view on the glasses is barely vast sufficient for about two of the 4 chairs. I flip my head forwards and backwards to see what the others are doing. The actors speak to me, simply to me, wanting me within the eyes, imparting their tales: Do they know me? Do I do know them?
Everybody within the theater house seems like they’ve these 4 actors seated throughout from them. It is a simultaneous phantasm. However I can not see what anybody else is seeing: I simply see them seated in a semicircle in entrance of me. That multiplicity may sound unusual, but it surely succeeds right here. It finally ends up feeling like we’re all bearing witness collectively.
We’re additionally sharing the identical ambient audio. I notice this midway by means of, that the complete room sound I used to be listening to, of them being there with me, can also be there for everybody. At the least, I believe we’re. I am fairly positive we’re.
I needed to take my glasses off and put contact lenses in. Look carefully, and you’ll see the digital chairs I see within the lenses of the Magic Leap 2 headset, barely.
Why this felt profound… and messy
Even in 2026, I have not seen that many moments the place augmented actuality turns into a substitute for the true. AR glasses have a problem that also has by no means been tackled: How do you make a digital expertise you see in the true world mesh safely and comfortably with everybody else who’s there, too, and who in all probability aren’t seeing precisely the identical factor of their glasses?
Compounding the issue is that AR glasses aren’t one thing most individuals have a lot expertise with. Combined actuality headsets just like the Apple Imaginative and prescient Professional, the Samsung Galaxy XR and the present line of Meta Quest headsets can create blended actuality that feels prefer it’s in your house with you, however nobody’s carrying these in public.
Magic Leap was an early innovator making an attempt to make AR issues occur. The producer of this present, Todd Eckert, was previously the top of content material growth for Magic Leap.
He produced two different Magic Leap hardware-powered theater experiences up to now: The Life (in an artwork set up, that includes Marina Abramović) and Kagami (an AR live performance piece made with Ryuichi Sakamoto). An Ark seems like an extension of the thought and a problem for us to reckon with how we’d settle for the digital presentation of actual actors. It is kind of an inversion of the present second: Whereas AI is throwing us so many movies of artificially generated folks, right here I noticed a digital presentation of very actual performing. I felt the distinction.
Establishing a closed theater occasion for shared moments like The Ark is a step in the best course. However I additionally do not know if such a expertise, over time, will nonetheless be attention-grabbing when the novelty of AR glasses is misplaced. Trying round, I received the sensation of individuals making an attempt out tech they’d by no means actually used earlier than. Popping out of the 45-minute present and strolling out a door to retrieve our saved footwear, I felt like I used to be rising from a ritual.
Could not I do that at dwelling as a substitute? Sure, however would it not really feel the identical, me alone in my cluttered house with out the enjoyment of sharing it with others? That is the factor. Whereas this $45, 45-minute present required me to journey to the west aspect of Manhattan on a chilly night, it additionally let me really feel togetherness nearly. We’re nonetheless not in a world the place most individuals even have the {hardware} to make this occur, a lot much less all collect to make use of it collectively.
However it’s additionally the performances, seen at an intimate distance, that made an impression. I’ve labored out with holographic trainers within the Meta Quest, but it surely does really feel particular to see such a digital presence in a clear, uncluttered house designed to obtain it.
I would find it irresistible extra if I one way or the other did not have to convey my very own contact lenses, however that is the truth of good eyewear proper now. So few good glasses are made to help all prescription varieties, and many do not match over glasses. The efficiency did supply prescription inserts to assist folks, however solely as much as -5. Bridget’s -6 prescription could not be totally matched, both.
My “I am at an actual play” senses had been activated, regardless that no stay actors had been truly there.
Afterward, oddly, a starvation for actuality
What An Ark did do, although, is make me really feel grounded in an expertise in an actual house. I bear in mind being in that room, seeing the folks. Taking my footwear off. Feeling current.
And within the present itself, because the 4 actors — angels or spirits between the worlds of life and demise, maybe — start to share reminiscences of lives as soon as lived, ones that mix and soften and characterize many individuals, maybe I, too, felt like a message was being imparted to me. I handed by means of the door, leaving the present blissful to be alive and glad to have made a journey to a spot to see theater — even with out the actors. Was that the entire thought? Possibly the ark is fabricated from us.
I’ve discovered myself pondering extra about the true world as I get deeper into private wearable tech that tries to attach and remodel the world round me. The true world is steady and tangible and wealthy. I wish to take note of it. An Ark let me do this whereas additionally being digital, which is magic in itself.
