The Tempest by William Shakespeare. Daramalan College, Director Joe Woodward. October 24-27, 2012-10-24
Reviewed by Frank McKone
October 24
The
purpose of this production is essentially for the education of the
student participants, on stage, backstage, front of house and in the
audience, working in a theatre production company format titled
Daramalan Theatre Company.
Head teacher Joe Woodward
(who also directs the independent theatre company, Shadow House Pits)
operates as overall artistic director, with a range of others – among
students and staff – taking on tasks such as Co-Director (for this
production, Desiree Bandle), Dramaturg / Pronunciation Coach (Tony
Allan), as well as all the necessary technical designers and operators.
I noticed two jobs I regard as essential for students to learn were
missing from the program: publicity and accountant.
The
theatre program “varies from group devised productions [to] classic and
contemporary scripts, in-house scripted works and musicals”, providing
students with a wide range of opportunities to gain experience and
understanding of theatre, whether or not they go on stage in later life.
This production of The Tempest
ticks all the educational boxes. Characterisation is strong; speaking
Shakesperian text varies in quality as I would expect, but is well
backed-up by movement work and choral sections; and there is effective
experimentation in reversing gender roles, where Prospero and Gonzalo
become Prospera and Gonzala, Ariel is male rather than the more usual
female (at least in post-17th Century productions), and Trinculo is
female, making the Stephano, Trinculo, Caliban relationship rather
different from the ordinary clown format.
Visually the
costumes, set and lighting, like the sound effects and music, are a
mixed conglomeration of some odd but many interesting ideas. Yet this
works well for the island full of weird spirits: The Tempest is a great vehicle for experimentation, for playing with possibilities.
The
atmosphere in the final scenes, where Prospera leaves her magical
powers to Caliban now that she has regained her rightful position as
Duchess, and Caliban regains his position of power passed down from his
mother, Sycorax, was well put together. At this point the whole cast
clearly felt at one with their audience – achieving this must be the key
to a good educational experience, and it was achieved on opening
night. Well done.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
No comments:
Post a Comment