Four Flat Whites in Italy by Roger Hall. Sydney’s Ensemble Theatre at The Street, Canberra. October 25-29, 2011.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
October 25
It’s a nice
play, like Mrs Worthington’s daughter, “But,” as Noel Coward sang, “Mrs
Worthington, dear Mrs Worthington, don’t put your daughter on the
stage, Mrs Worthington.” I don’t mean the actors shouldn’t have been on
the stage last night, but the author has some questions to answer.
Every play has a context within which it might be judged. Having just seen the so much cleverer Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris,
I can’t help thinking Roger Hall needs some critical advice. However
worthy, he’s a Kiwi who shouldn’t go out in the midday sun without a
proper pith helmet.
My reason for taking such a
critical position – rather than simply saying that this production is as
entertaining as one would normally expect from Ensemble Theatre – is
reading commentary in NZ Herald TV like ‘Rather than batting away the
question of whether he sees himself as New Zealand's greatest
playwright, he considers it through a rational commercial lens. "The
merit or otherwise of my plays aside, I've written more plays and fed
more into the box office than any other New Zealand playwright."’ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlfVahGfutE, while elsewhere the idea has been put around that Roger Hall is New Zealand’s David Williamson.
Though I have at times been critical of Williamson’s penchant for one liner comedies, Four Flat Whites in Italy can’t be compared with, say, Travelling North,
which also deals with an older couple rediscovering the truth in their
relationship in making a change. On the other hand, if Four Flat Whites is meant to be no more than light comedy, it hasn’t the delicate touch of a Noel Coward play like, say, Private Lives which has a similar pair of couples format.
Hall
makes his themes – nowadays called ‘tropes’, I guess – far too explicit
by using the husband Adrian as both commentator on and participant in
the action. Sandra Bates as director and Michael Ross, the actor,
handle this as well as the script allows, but you only have to look at
Tennessee Williams’ The Glass Menagerie to see how it should be
done. The problem here is that Adrian’s action in the past (falling
asleep at the wheel and causing his and Alison’s daughter’s paraplegia
and early death) is so central to the serious side of the play that it
is embarrassing to have Adrian speak directly to the audience in comedy
mode.
Because we see Alison – played very well by
Sharon Flanagan with the full depth of the emotions resulting from her
reaction to her life as Joanna’s carer – as a realistic character coming
to terms with tragedy, it is difficult to know how to respond to the
revival of her love for Adrian who, to us, has been outside the story as
much as inside. The dance under the stars at the end, to me at least,
became a simplistic sentimental romance conclusion which undermined the
reality of Alison’s experience, while apparently her forgiving Adrian
simply lifted all guilt and emotional weight from his shoulders. All
too easy, for my liking.
The other themes, of wealth,
of political positioning, of being Kiwi, of realising that someone else
needs a bit of help when life has treated them unfairly, are all
embedded in the other two characters. Henri Szeps and Mary Regan play
Harry and his second wife Judy skilfully and to great comic effect as
well as neatly handling the change of attitude towards Alison and Adrian
as they discover more about Joanna’s life and death.
Yet
these characters are there as ciphers, obviously symbolising points
that the author wants to include in the play that New Zealanders will
respond to. The success of the play at home, and the recognition by the
audience on opening night here of the right times to laugh, showed that
Hall has found his marks.
It was a bit problematical
last night, though, that in real life the All Blacks had just beaten
France and won the World Cup, when in the play, set in 2007, France had
just beaten the All Blacks in a quarter-final and the Kiwis were in
mourning for the loss. Perhaps this affected my response to the scene
watching the rugby. Though the actors did it all very well, it went on
far too long for me, watching their reactions to a screen I couldn’t
see. Maybe this was a case where multi-media could have been used and
we could all have seen famous footballers flailing in the face of French
infallibility.
So though the night was enjoyable, I
can’t say it was fully satisfying. Perhaps it’s being too harsh to say
that, like Mrs Worthington’s daughter, it shouldn’t be on the stage.
But it does seem to me not to be a play of the same standing as Neil
Simon or David Williamson who have been a standard for Ensemble Theatre
over the years.
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Those readers who are probably much younger than me (or perhaps you’ve just lost your memory) can see a fair representation of Mrs Worthington by Fenton Gray at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=RA8XKb8OFfA (Uploaded by FentonGray on 16 May 2010)
and, though I think you will have to buy Coward’s original recording of this song, you can watch him singing others (like Mad Dogs and Englishmen) in his inimitable impeccable style at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=1ccGh8-Ipww (Noel Coward's first television appearance! Uploaded by kitschbitch on 4 Feb 2007).
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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