Shrine
by Tim Winton. Black Swan State Theatre Company, Perth, directed by
Kate Cherry, at Canberra Theatre Centre Playhouse, September 26-29,
2013.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
September 26
Tim
Winton is a storyteller, and so are his characters. Alongside the road
he sees a small white cross, some flowers and objects scattered around
the base of a tree. This is not just a memorial, but a shrine symbolic
of the person who died there. But what does it mean when among the
bottles of spirits and beer there is an old thong?
He
sees a middle-aged man, Adam, stop to angrily tear down the shrine and
disperse all the memories. But the next time Adam drives by, he has to
stop and destroy the construction again. Who keeps re-creating the
shrine?
As we hear Adam Mansfield (John Howard), his
wife Mary (Sarah McNeill) and the teenage girl June Fenton (Whitney
Richards) tell their stories, which include the stories told by the
teenagers who survived the crash, Will (Luke McMahon) and Ben (Will
McNeill), and by the dead teenager Jack Mansfield (Paul Ashcroft), we
discover a complexity of life of the kind that must be represented by
every shrine we see along every country road.
It’s a
sobering experience, yet also enlightening. And for many, as Kate
Cherry said in the pre-show forum, the play provides a catharsis, a kind
of cleansing of fear, especially among parents of teenage boys. Though
there are humorous moments, this is a tragedy in the ancient Greek
form. We know the ending before the play begins, but how did it come to
this?
In Winton’s storytelling, time is a highly
malleable element. All the physical items needed – the tree, the
shrine, the two halves of the car, the funeral furniture, the fire on
the beach, Adam’s beach house wine bar – are present on stage
throughout, so scenes shift and time changes as characters move and are
lit or shadowed.
The acting was excellent throughout,
with to my mind special mention justified for the women, Whitney
Richards and Sarah McNeill, whose roles reminded me of the Greek – of
the young Antigone, who pleaded for the proper treatment of her dead
brother, and an older Electra, left alone when all in the household are
dead. As, in some sense, the central character, John Howard’s creation
of the diversity of attitudes and feelings within Adam Mansfield was a
brilliant piece of work – not so much ancient Greek, but rather very
recognisable modern Australian.
For West Australians,
as we might expect from Winton’s other writing, there are points of
local identification – but these give the work specificity while the
issues are universal. This is what makes for great storytelling, and an
excellent drama on stage.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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