the (very) sad fish lady conceived, written and directed by Joy McDonald. At The Street Theatre - Street Two, Canberra, September 28 – October 5, 2013.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
September 28
Between
a rock and a hard place, there are laid out across the dividing waters
stepping stones to this highly imaginative piece of folk theatre.
On
the Rock lives a Greek grandmother alone with her chicken. On the
Mediterranean island of a Hard Place live people who are never happy –
not enough olives, not enough rain, too much rain, too windy. They
tread gingerly over the stepping stones – too many of them, of course –
to have coffee with the Fish Lady, so that she can read the pictures in
the coffee grounds and tell them their fortunes.
But
her own fortune is sad – so sad that even her chicken stops laying her
daily egg – because her children live far away across the sea in
Australia and she has never seen her little grandaughter.
In
her imagination she becomes a fish who could swim to the other side of
the world, but it is the mysterious boatman, Mister Moustache –
pronounced Moustaki – who sees her sadness and magically brings her
family to visit. Their coffee grounds all present the same picture.
She will travel across the sea with them all the way to Australia – and
so she does.
Though the chicken is so happy for her
that she lays three eggs in one day, I was not sure about the chicken’s
future – hopefully to cheer up the people of the Hard Place.
Over the years I have seen too much slick entertainment for young children. I have called Joy McDonald’s work folk theatre
because, without pretension or the veneer of commercialism, her
puppets, images and sound track tell a personal story of our times for
the children of our multicultural families. Her puppeteers, Ruth
Pieloor and James Scott, put on no airs while their expertise is evident
not only in operating complex string puppets, hand puppets, shadow
puppets and even a boat with a puppet, Mister Moustache, apparently
pulling oars that really move – as well as the sad and later the smiling
moon.
It is, of course, the clever design work of
Imogen Keen and Hilary Talbot that makes all this possible. I guess, in
the world of art criticism, the devices and imagery in the (very) sad fish lady might be called naїve art,
but that’s exactly right for 3-5 year-olds. And with music by David
Pereira and dramaturgical support from Richard Bradshaw, it’s obvious
that this folk art theatre, as I think I should call it – like naїve art – is certainly not unsophisticated. Nor slick. Nor commercial.
the (very) sad fish lady
is genuine storytelling, fascinating for the littlies and equally
amusing and significant for their parents. Highly recommended.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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