Pea!
 by David Finnigan.  Serious Theatre – director: barb barnett; 
designer:Gillian Schwab; audio designer: Seth Edwards-Ellis.  At The 
Street Theatre, April 20-27, 2013, 10am and 2pm.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
April 24
If there is one lesson which should be taught to all young Australian children, surely it must be irreverence.  Pea! does it nicely.
On the other hand, children’s theatre must treat its trusting audience with respect – as indeed should all theatre.  Pea! does this too.
The
 Hive Program at The Street Theatre encourages new writing and, with 
dramaturgical assistance, offers a season on stage.  David Finnigan’s 
work in Pea! is perhaps the most assured and sophisticated product that I have seen so far from The Hive.
He
 has taken the moral behind the Hans Christian Andersen fable of the 
princess and the pea – that those absorbed in their own self-importance 
should be brought down to earth – and turned it on its head.  “Princess”
 is no more than the name given Gwendoline by the wolves who kindly 
brought her up when her parents had abandoned her in the Wild Wood of 
the West.  Gwen satisfies Prince Gregor’s pea-brained mother’s Princess 
Test, which she learned from daytime Royal Weddings television, 
precisely because Gwen is not full of self-importance but only wishes to
 save everyone from the Dragon-with-One-Nostrilled-Snout.
Gregor
 is certainly lucky to be taken in hand by a woman who can look after 
herself and sleep as comfortably on the ground as on 40 mattresses – and
 can solve the problem of how to use the pea to stop up the 
One-Nostrilled Snout.  The whole kingdom is saved as the fiery Dragon’s 
internal gas pressure forces explosive farts from his other end, and he 
flies home in shame to his mother.  It wasn’t just the children who 
could not contain themselves at this point in the story.  I’m sure the 
laughing adults around me were thinking of a number of figures of 
seeming social importance whose snouts they might like to stop up with a
 pea, or three….
But the respect and care for the 
children was there from the beginning, as the actors – Cathy Petöcz and 
Josh Wiseman – made sure they had found out just about every child’s 
name and engaged them in conversation – about the other theme of the 
play: what’s your favourite vegetable?  The Pea becomes the narrator, 
from his pedestal in the Museum of Famous Vegetables, and is even rather
 boastful of having saved the kingdom – except that everyone soon learns
 that it was really Gwendoline with a little help from Gregor.  But, 
significantly, when there is thunder and lightning as the Dragon 
approaches, Pea stops the action to check if anyone is scared – because 
he or she (according to which actor is puppeteering at the time) is a 
bit scared too.  “No, of course not,” the children reply.  “We’re not 
afraid of the Dragon!” – and on we go to the explosive farts.
Carefully
 thought-out touches such as this were in themselves educational – for 
the children and even perhaps for parents.  The script, and I suspect 
work done during the workshop and rehearsal process, shows how theatre 
can manipulate an audience’s reactions, but good theatre does this 
ethically.  It’s this, the irreverence of the script, and the 
originality of the set design and use of puppetry, that I would like to 
praise the whole team for, in Pea!
© Frank McKone, Canberra


 
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