Showing posts with label Sarah Goodes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah Goodes. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 May 2018

Review - The Children

Melbourne Theatre Company Presents

The Children
By Lucy Kirkwood

Directed by Sarah Goodes

Set and Costume Design – Elizabeth Gadsby
Lighting Designer – Paul Jackson
Composer and Sound Designer – Steve Francis

Cast:
Hazel – Pamela Rabe
Rose – Sarah Peirse
Robin – William Zappa

A challenging and rewarding work The Children unfolds naturalistically in real time. 

On a simple functional set of a rustic kitchen by Elizabeth Gadsby, that is superbly lit by Paul Jackson, three clever and influential sixty something nuclear physicists reunite.  The world as they know it has been turned upside down by a Fukushima like disaster.  Some of their pasts are divulged and we get to witness their flawed and often messy humanness.  And the apparently altruistic reason for the, often uncomfortable, ‘get together’ is revealed in the last minutes of the piece. 

Lucy Kirdwood’s text functions on a number of levels.  As an unfolding story it is full of surprises and maintains interest.  However as an observation of characters from the baby boomer generation it sometimes feels like an indictment.  The subject matter of our damage to our planet is deeply unsettling.  But there is another niggling ambiguous rift in this production.  Perhaps it is in the writing.  I am wondering if this is because Kirkwood is a much younger woman than the generation she is writing about.  Therefore what is presented is only partially from the lived perspective of the protagonists.   So at times the actors are bound by the way Kirkwood has written - to perform their characters from the perspective of an observer.

There is lots of humour and many laughs in this work.   However I get the impression there is a delicate balance, for director Sarah Goodes, between releasing the intrinsic sense of fun and play in the material from under the pall of the framing of a story of cataclysmic disaster.  I am wondering if the production itself tends more towards naturalism then the playwright intended.

Pamela Rabe’s Hazel is upfront and fascinated by, and unapologetic for, her own very human foibles.  At times she seems to be Hazel but every now and again she performs Hazel with self-deprecating humour.  Sarah Peirse brings to life the more independent and troubled Rose, a haunting presence who generally seems removed, somewhat toxic, and willfully unaffected by her friends.   William Zappa plays Robin, Hazel’s husband, the character with a greater sense of humour.  As with the other two his character expresses a very finely toned sense of his own self-importance.   

Throughout there are a number of rather clunky clichés and strangely simplistic statements.   All three characters are penned as clever privileged people exhibiting the appropriate blend of narcissism of those of their generation.  They have a disparate awkwardness about them as they relate to each other in an often-prickly manner.   The chemistry between the characters feels thin and fleeting but perhaps this will grow during the run.  Or perhaps one of the points of the work is that we are all alone together in this nest that we have soiled.

Sound by Steve Francis is minimal and extremely effective particularly in the last moments of the staging. 

My quibbles and questions aside I found The Children very engaging and rewarding, most particularly, for the argument it presents - I do heartily ‘recommend it.


Suzanne Sandow
(For Stage Whispers)

Tuesday, 7 March 2017

Review - John

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 Fairfax Theatre opens out to embrace the audience and bring them into the intimate workings of four complex individuals.  It is a great venue for this fascinating, intriguing and enigmatic work. 

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.
Ursula Mills, Helen Morse and Johnny Carr - Photo Jeff Busby



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
The sound (Russell Goldsmith) is mostly constituted of upbeat classical music that I suspect is heavily prescribed by Ms. Barker.

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