When the rain stops falling
by Andrew Bovell. A collaboration with Hossein Valamanesh and Brink
Productions. Directed by Chris Drummond at The Playhouse, Canberra
Theatre Centre, November 10-13, 2010.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
November 10
This production of a play, described by Richard Zoglin in Time
as ‘easily the best new play of the year’ at its US premiere at the
Lincoln Centre in March this year, is a privilege to behold. The
acting, direction and design all fall into their right places
stylistically and technically in a jigsaw puzzle which comes together
piece by piece.
At first there are scattered elements
of a picture picked up seemingly at random from four generations
leading to the meeting of Gabriel York and his son Andrew Price. The
experience watching is exactly as happens while reconstructing a complex
1000 piece puzzle. Aha! realisations light up completely unexpectedly
when it becomes clear that this or that piece just has to go here or
there. Yet it is not until the very last piece is in place that we feel
the tension that we might not have everything correctly understood,
fall away. Only as the last clue is revealed, just as the rain stops
falling, do we suddenly feel we can breathe again with satisfaction that
all is now positively complete.
Zoglin goes as far as
to compare Bovell’s work with the achievements of the novelist William
Faulkner. It is a fair comparison in two ways.
Faulkner
used devices like plain print interspersed with italic print and
standard sentence structure interspersed with poetic line forms as a way
of shifting from time to time or from internal to external
experience. The result is difficult reading until you allow the
feelings expressed in the words to wash into your mind without
self-consciously seeking logical understanding or even clarity of
events.
Bovell’s writing is theatrically interpreted by
this production team to create a similar kind of time and perspective
shifting, which as Faulkner achieves in the end of The Sound and the Fury, finally comes into clear focus in the final scene of When the rain stops falling.
But
the perhaps more important way that the comparison with Faulkner is
sensible is that Bovell, as does Faulkner, creates in his jigsaw, images
and themes in words and action which symbolise elements of the human
condition which recognisably belong to the writer’s culture – American
in Faulkner’s case, and Australian in Bovell’s. In the local we see the
universal.
It is interesting to read the American
Zoglin’s description: ‘The play is unrelievedly bleak but with a
denouement of unexpected hope: a moving, almost revelatory evening of
theater’ while the Australian audience on opening night in Canberra
responded to the many moments of ironic humour which are built into our
culture. We certainly found the unexpected hope, but not an unrelieved
bleakness. In fact, without laughter, I suspect, the unexpected hope at
the end would have been maudlin and sentimental. In this production,
it was ultimately satisfying to know that Gabriel and his son Andrew,
with the help of a fish falling from the sky, could at last enjoy each
other’s company after four generations of emotional disaster.
Bovell’s work, it seems to me, has matured in this play even beyond his earlier Holy Day.
Now he has achieved strength in simplicity, placing him among the great
playwrights not only of Australia but around the world.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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