Melbourne Theatre
Company Presents
John
By Annie Barker
Directed by Sarah
Goodes
Set and Costume
Designer - Elizabeth Gadsby
Lighting Designer
- Richard Vabre
Composer and Sound
– Russell Goldsmith
Cast
Elias
Schreiber-Hoffman – Johnny Carr
Genevieve Marduck - Melita Jurisic
Jenny Chung –
Ursula Mills
Mertis Katherine
Graven – Helen Morse
Art Centre
-Fairfax Theatre
10 February – 25
March 2017
Ursula Mills, Johnny Carr and Helen Morse - photo Jeff Busby |
The domestic
setting by designer Elizabeth Gadsby, of an all-purpose living room for guests,
is busy with clashing yet strangely simpatico décor. Like a fifth idiosyncratic character the set
is acutely integral to the unfolding of the story. At times it is also used to add dashes of
magic realism.
A young unmarried
couple, Jenny (Ursula Mills) and Elias (Johnny Carr) come to stay at a Bed and
Breakfast in Gettysburg Pennsylvania. It
would appear the reason they’re there is because Elias had a great interest in
the American Civil War as a lad. There
is considerable stress in the couple’s relationship and things aren’t running
smoothly for them.
The environment is
quaint and quirky and their mature and delicate hostess, Mertis played by Helen
Morse a little odd. She seems to have an
uncanny control of eventualities – but does she?
Annie Barker is a much-lauded
playwright. To date she has written and
had produced seven highly regarded works.
Melbourne audiences may remember Circle
Mirror Transformation, with which, Melbourne Theatre Company introduced us
to her. Then fast on it’s heals Red
Stitch produced Aliens directed most
skillfully by Nadia Tass. Red Stitch
also produced her more recent play Flick
to considerable acclaim.
John takes naturalism to an extreme. It’s characters function in as close to real time as possible. Although it is slow the audience is perpetually on ‘tender hooks’ searching for and making meaning. In all, it generates a rich sense of humanity, compassion and kindheartedness.
What is this play
ultimately about? It is a work about living and about intimacy,
sticky interactions, tolerance, acceptance, patience and self-reflection - to
name the most obvious things. It looks at varying degrees of deception, self-deception
and collusions and it confronts the niggling and uncomfortable. It also touches on the mysticism and
superstition we use to frame and understand the day-to-day mysteries and
uncertainties in our lives.
Over all the
characterization is glorious. Johnny
Carr is virtually unrecognizable as Elias.
His Elias has a big, almost uncontainable, presence. He has masses of hair and a slightly uneasy
and irritated demeanor. As actor he
masterfully renders himself unrecognizable.
Helen Morse
creates a wonderful quizzical and wholly believable Mertis Katherine Craven or
Kitty - so down to earth and yet bemusingly evanescent. Morse is so deeply ‘in the moment’ that
Mertis is marvelously convincing.
Melita Jurisic
brings her own unique magic and ages by at least twenty years to delight us
with the blind but wise Genevieve Marduck.
Ursula Mills play
the seemingly straight -forward Jenny beautifully. The lack of artifice in her characterization
seems to render her the pivotal character.
This tends me toward the feeling that John is at its heart a young woman’s story.
Mysterious and
subtle and not so subtle light changes (Richard Vavre) accentuate some of the
strange and weird atmospheres and eventualities.
Johnny Carr, Helen Morse, and Melita Jurisic - Photo Jeff Busby |
They (whoever they
are) say it is the sign of an artist to be able to find the extraordinary in
the ordinary. This is definitely what
Annie Barker achieves and she finds joy and a kind of redemption in the
troubled and troubling minutia of life.
Four and a half
stars.
Suzanne Sandow
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