Two women, two men, four bedrooms, one hotel. Everything they need is delivered to their doors. One problem: none of them can sleep - instead they kill time in cold baths or by finding comfort in the solace of the hotel mini bar. Free to do what they want each is being watched by a camera as they make up imaginary friends, rehearse dance routines and invite the audience to fulfill dreams and answer difficult questions. Room Service messes around with the reality cliché, leaping from finely tuned banality to chaotic theatricality.
In the conference room of the hotel the audience will watch the four performers on a fourway split screen projection. In the anonymity and discretion of the hotel environment the performers will enact forbidden games and unlived desires at the request of the audience.
Room Service - an invitation to play with an open end. The audience will decide who will visit who and how. What outcome will those meetings have? A party or everybody staying alone? Will members of the audience leave their position as voyeurs and get into direct contact with the performers, will they play a role?