Melbourne Theatre
Company Presents
Wild
By
Mike Bartlett
Director – Dean
Bryant
Set Designer –
Andrew Bailey
Costume Designer –
Owen Philips
Lighting Designer
– Ross Graham
Composer and Sound
Designer – Sydney Millar
Cast
Andrew – Nicholas
Denton
Woman – Anna Lise
Phillips
Man – Toby Schmitz
Southbank Theatre,
The Sumner
5 May – 9 June
2018
Wild
is a fresh, clever, pacey, engrossing work.
In fact you don’t know what has hit you when you walk out of the
auditorium.
As a probe of the
public/private realm, that highlights just how vulnerable we are to scrutiny in
all aspects of our lives, it is very timely.
It suggests that even those of us who have lived only a small percentage
of our lives on/with social media are still vulnerable to not having the luxury
of keeping any dark secrets in the proverbial closet.
As theatre
audiences we are privileged to get to see Mike Bartlett’s work. His play Cock was produced by MTC in 2014 and
more recently by Bakers Dozen (Directed by Ben Ho) earlier this year. And Bartlett’s Oliver Award winning play King George III about Prince Charles
ascension to the throne, complete with ghost of Princess Diana, was given an
airing in Sydney by STC in 2016.
Cock
it is about identity and how identity is influenced by environment and in
relation to others. Wild explores the shattering of identity due to the destabilizing
of the structures constitute society.
Andrew (Nicholas
Denton) has the appearance and demeanor of a kind of everyman. He is portrayed as a person who, seemingly
with out guile, blew a whistle on corruption that in turn released Government
secrets - like Edward Snowden. The
subsequent fallout is frightening.
Andrew is rendered stateless and bailed up in a generic hotel room in
Moscow. We witness is his destabilizing
by two ‘secret agent types’ Woman (Anna Lise Phillips) and Man (Toby Schmitz). These characters are confusing and disturbing
particularly because of the way they talk about themselves and how their
stories change.
Andrew’s total
vulnerability is palpable. Yet we feel,
not so much for him, but for ourselves as we watch him try to grapple with his
drastically changed circumstances. Having ruptured reality, by exposing some of the
fundamental travesties that underpin the mechanics of society as we have constructed it, any
reliable framework has been smashed for Andrew.
As Man, Schmitz,
with the help of a wacky hair-do, has developed the most marvelously sinister
character with indications of ominous power and shifty danger. Phillips as Woman is no less engaging. Her energy, commitment and focus does much
to drive the performance forward as it twists back on its self and confounds.
Ultimately nothing
is as it seems and we, almost too fully, experience Andrews wrenching
disassociation.
In many ways Dean
Bryant makes the perfect Director for Wild
however I feel the obvious is overstated at times. For example Andrew’s helplessness is highlighted
in the middle of the work through a naked torso. Wild
is very energetically and emphatically staged.
I wonder if, as the season progresses and the production matures,
moderation in tempo and intensity will heighten clarity.
The set with
evocatively strange vivid colouring is designed by Andrew Bailey and enhanced
by the shades in the costumes (Owen Phillips) and beautifully lit by Ross
Graham. And sound Design by Sidney
Miller is marvelously subtle and atmospheric.
It is such a
pleasure to be an audience to actors who are not mic’d.
Pretty much as
exciting as anticipated.
Very strong and
intelligent theatre.
Suzanne Sandow
(For Stage Whispers)
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