Heaven & Earth
by Will Gayre. Mainstage Theatre Company directed by Don Gay at
Peacock Theatre, Salamanca Place, Hobart. November 22-30, 2013
Reviewed by Frank McKone
November 28
Canberra
critics have published reviews recently from Sydney, Melbourne and
Perth. It’s now Hobart’s turn. Mainstage is based at the Peacock
Theatre in the Salamanca Arts Centre. The author and the director are
one and the same person despite their different names. This alone
begins to explain the nature of the philosophy behind this play – that
reality is so vast, indeed infinite in its possibilities, that any
unexplainable experience may be as likely to have a cause outside what
we regard as evidential in the scientific sense as to have a place
within our concepts of the physical universe.
It’s a challenging task to make a successful drama on this kind of theme, beginning from a personal apparent déjà vu
recognition of an Italian country house while driving past on a holiday
trip from Tasmania. Tourist Dan’s obsession with finding out the
‘truth’, and the apparent truth he finds and reacts to, with tragic
consequences, is presented to us by his defence lawyer as a question for
judgement.
If all the events are no more than a mental
aberration on his part, should Dan be treated as criminally guilty of
murder? On the other hand if these events, inexplicable in normal
physical terms, really happened, then who did he actually kill – and was
this a criminal act?
There are reminiscences all the way from Carrie to The Maids
as the ‘spirit’ world seems to have effect 80 years after the causative
events on that Italian farm in World War II, but this script does not
match either of those for dramatic quality. The writer Will Gayre
provides a lengthy description in the program of his recurring dream
“from the age of about six until maybe twenty” of “standing in front of
an old double-storied [sic] farm house with a tiled roof and
cream stucco walls” which he would enter and sometimes see “people in
the rooms – never anyone I recognised and they didn’t seem at all aware
of my presence.”
Fictional tourist Dan speaks Gayre’s
words from the program notes: “Nearly ten years later I was driving
through Italy on my first major Eurpoean sojourn. Somewhere between
Pisa and Livorno I turned a corner with the river I was following and,
there, sitting on the river bank was ... the villa from my dreams!”
Bit
by bit a story develops of two couples – Dan (Alex Rigozzi) and current
girlfriend Sue (Melanie Brown), and their friends Matt (Aidan Furst)
and Jo (Bryony Hindley) who also play the roles in 1940-41 of newly
married Marko and Sophia. Sophia refuses to accept Marko's being called
up in the defence of his country, calls upon God – who seems unable to
help her – and kills her husband rather than allow him to return to
battle after his all-too-short leave. She stabs herself, but lives for
some time before dying in a mental asylum, while the local villagers
believe the violence was at the hands of unknown assailants on one side
or the other in the confusion of the war in Italy.
So
far, so good – except that in the modern time Dan’s digital photo of the
house shows a shadowy figure of a woman. Later her image has
disappeared. Then when Sue makes seriously playful sexual approaches to
Dan, some inexplicable force throws her away from him. After an
attempt to take Dan back in time by an older woman hypnotist (Carol
Devereaux) with whom Dan had previously had a relationship, Sophia
appears as a ghost to him, but a touch on the shoulder spins him around,
and it is Jo he kills.
Matt and Sue are distraught and
mystified, while it seems that Sophia had become Jo, whom the obsessed –
or rather possessed – Dan had to destroy. At this point Devereaux
appears as Dan’s defence attorney to present her concluding speech to
us, as the jury.
You can see the connection with Carrie, I guess, but you may be wondering why I mentioned Jean Genet’s The Maids. The problem for Heaven & Earth is that it is far too much like the superficial idea of horror-spirit-reality in popular genre movies like Carrie, when it needs the subtleties of psychology of The Maids
to support the weight of serious discussion of the nature of reality
which this writer seems to want to have with us. Images disappearing
from a hard drive and a character being thrown across the stage by a
mysterious force just don’t cut the mustard.
Gayre takes Shakespeare as his source – There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy
– as if we, or indeed Shakespeare, might believe Hamlet’s father’s
ghost to be literally real. Nothing inexplicable happens in Hamlet.
But Shakespeare, like Genet, understood that events can overwhelm some
people’s ability to hold onto reality, while their plays help us
understand ourselves. Gayre does no more than fall into the fad of
questioning everything just because we can.
There is
also the problem that Don Gay, director, was not able to present the
play on stage in a smoother format, rather than switching back and forth
between times and places in a repetitive and interruptive way. Yes,
it was obvious when we saw the slide of the old farmhouse that this was
now 1940/41, and now it is modern times in Don and Sue’s apartment when
that stone wall was turned around to become their sofa. Too obvious.
Though
the script itself makes this a technical staging problem, it could have
been handled better – even in the fairly limited performing space of
the Peacock Theatre – by, for example, setting aside one area for the
1940/41 period and another for modern time. Then, with lighting and
actors held in freeze positions, changes would not need actors to exit
and enter, with the occasional backstage person or the actors themselves
having to move props and furniture that I had to watch. It would also
allow space and time to be connected for us, for example by the force
that throws Sue appearing to come from Sophia’s area on the stage, and
so that the transition of Sophia into Jo might be made as Dan moves into
the 1940/41 space and time.
However, if there was one
aspect of the play that showed dramatic strength it was in the
performance of Sophia and Jo by Bryony Hindley, backed by effective work
by Aidan Furst as Marko and Matt. Hindley, at nineteen, is written up
as seeking to audition for further training. I for one would certainly
encourage her in this endeavour.
Mainstage is clearly a
small-scale company, similar to the many Canberra companies like Elbow
Theatre, Bohemian Productions and others now associated with the
development programs offered by The Street Theatre which continue to
generate new work and opportunities for practitioners, often opening up
interstate and international employment. I suppose I should conclude,
then, that there are more things, indeed, at least on earth, and perhaps
even in heaven, for such theatre companies to aspire to.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
Theatre criticism and commentary by Frank McKone, Canberra, Australia. Reviews from 1996 to 2009 were originally edited and published by The Canberra Times. Reviews since 2010 are also published on Canberra Critics' Circle at www.ccc-canberracriticscircle.blogspot.com AusStage database record at https://www.ausstage.edu.au/pages/contributor/1541
Thursday, 28 November 2013
Monday, 4 November 2013
2013: Symposium on Splinters Theatre of Spectacle. Report.
A Canberra Critics' Circle Symposium on Splinters Theatre of Spectacle
Saturday November 2, from 1.30pm to 4pm at the Canberra Museum and Gallery Theatrette.
A brief reflection by Frank McKone
Chaired by CCC convenor, Helen Musa, each of the speakers took the floor for some 20 minutes, including questions from the small but keenly interested audience. Speakers were:
Patrick Troy, one of the founders of Splinters, who remained central to Splinters’ work throughout the company’s performances from 1985 to 1996, coming from a drama background in high school and secondary college, and Canberra Youth Theatre. He provided a lively sense of the variety, energy, and sometimes conflicting forces which stimulated the work of Splinters, as well as the often difficult times of touring with little finance. Discussion arose about the place of women, including leading performers and writers such as Pauline Cady, who subsequently became co-director of Snuff Puppets in Melbourne (http://www.snuffpuppets.com/) and the photographer Katherine Pepper, whose documenting of Splinters’ performances has formed an essential part of the exhibition at the Canberra Museum and Gallery Splinters Theatre of Spectacle: Massive love of risk (28 September – December 2013) (http://www.museumsandgalleries.act.gov.au/cmag/). The current director of ACT Museums and Galleries is Shane Breynard, also a supporter of Splinters in the 1980s.
Actor/Artist Renald Navilly who worked with Splinters over many years in a role which might best be described as enabler and shaper. He made it clear that his was never an authoritarian approach: his function was to hear ideas put forward by people, welcome all ideas however diverse, encourage people to be the authors of the development of ideas, and help guide the process of selection to create a dramatic structure in performance. He spoke of the influences on his philosophy and practice such as the Living Theatre (http://www.livingtheatre.org/about/history), Jerzy Grotowksi’s Polish Laboratory Theatre (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerzy_Grotowski) and to some extent by the work of Antonin Artaud (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theatre_of_Cruelty).
Assistant Professor Dr Geoff Hinchcliffe, Media and Graphic Design at University of Canberra, was a participant in many Splinters performances, on stage and in visual design and effects, with a background in secondary college drama and tertiary training at the Canberra School of Art. He spoke on the visual culture developed by Splinters, but also took up discussion of the group collective approach which made Splinters into a social unit open to welcoming new participants and changing ideas, noting that possibly some 1000 people were involved over the decade.
Canberra author Joel Swadling spoke on the biography he is writing about the late David Branson, a founding member of Splinters as well as a key figure in a wide range of theatrical and musical work as director and performer until his tragic accidental death in 2001. As the work on the biography progresses, from a detailed study of nine boxes of Branson’s papers – now held in the ACT Heritage Library Manuscript Collection http://www.library.act.gov.au/find/history/search/Manuscript_Collections/David_Branson – and through extensive interviews with many of the people who knew and worked with Branson, a picture is forming of the quality and importance of his contribution to theatre arts in Canberra, Australia and internationally.
This writer, educator/theatre critic Frank McKone, spoke on the issue which others also alluded to: how did Splinters’ often anarchic approach to theatre arise in Canberra, the capital city largely populated by public servants, and seen by outsiders as a planned city with no soul. He proposed a theory that in 1968, the 19th year of conservative government, the accidental rise to the Prime Ministership of John Gorton, described as a man who liked to portray himself as a man of the people who enjoyed a beer and a gamble, with a bit of a "larrikin" streak about him, in stark contrast to the previous Liberal Party PMs, stirred the conventional public servants, by osmosis, to reject the control of Canberra’s education system by the authoritarian New South Wales Department, and to demand our own ACT Schools Authority. In starting a new system from scratch, including offering the first Drama courses in Australia at matriculation level, teachers found themselves with the freedom to “negotiate the curriculum” with their students from 1972, very much in the manner that Renald Navilly described in his work with Splinters participants from 1985.
The curator of the CMAG exhibition which included this Symposium, former Splinters member Gavin Findlay who joined after being impressed by the work they presented at the Performance Space, Redfern in Sydney, (http://www.performancespace.com.au/us/history/) then spoke on the archiving of Splinters records and how the materials and history form the basis of his doctoral research designed to recognise the place of Splinters in 20th Century theatre, nationally and internationally.
In discussion, as well as the developments in the schools in the 1970s, the importance of the establishment by Carol Woodrow (http://www.womenaustralia.info/biogs/AWE4882b.htm) of Canberra Children’s Theatre, Reid House Theatre Workshop, Canberra Youth Theatre, The Jigsaw Company, and The Fools’ Gallery during the same period, showed that Canberra was developing its own sense of authorship in both the educational and professional theatre circles, so that by the mid-1980s there was fertile ground for Splinters to grow among young people committed to the crossover of theatre and visual arts.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
Saturday November 2, from 1.30pm to 4pm at the Canberra Museum and Gallery Theatrette.
A brief reflection by Frank McKone
Chaired by CCC convenor, Helen Musa, each of the speakers took the floor for some 20 minutes, including questions from the small but keenly interested audience. Speakers were:
Patrick Troy, one of the founders of Splinters, who remained central to Splinters’ work throughout the company’s performances from 1985 to 1996, coming from a drama background in high school and secondary college, and Canberra Youth Theatre. He provided a lively sense of the variety, energy, and sometimes conflicting forces which stimulated the work of Splinters, as well as the often difficult times of touring with little finance. Discussion arose about the place of women, including leading performers and writers such as Pauline Cady, who subsequently became co-director of Snuff Puppets in Melbourne (http://www.snuffpuppets.com/) and the photographer Katherine Pepper, whose documenting of Splinters’ performances has formed an essential part of the exhibition at the Canberra Museum and Gallery Splinters Theatre of Spectacle: Massive love of risk (28 September – December 2013) (http://www.museumsandgalleries.act.gov.au/cmag/). The current director of ACT Museums and Galleries is Shane Breynard, also a supporter of Splinters in the 1980s.
Actor/Artist Renald Navilly who worked with Splinters over many years in a role which might best be described as enabler and shaper. He made it clear that his was never an authoritarian approach: his function was to hear ideas put forward by people, welcome all ideas however diverse, encourage people to be the authors of the development of ideas, and help guide the process of selection to create a dramatic structure in performance. He spoke of the influences on his philosophy and practice such as the Living Theatre (http://www.livingtheatre.org/about/history), Jerzy Grotowksi’s Polish Laboratory Theatre (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerzy_Grotowski) and to some extent by the work of Antonin Artaud (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theatre_of_Cruelty).
Assistant Professor Dr Geoff Hinchcliffe, Media and Graphic Design at University of Canberra, was a participant in many Splinters performances, on stage and in visual design and effects, with a background in secondary college drama and tertiary training at the Canberra School of Art. He spoke on the visual culture developed by Splinters, but also took up discussion of the group collective approach which made Splinters into a social unit open to welcoming new participants and changing ideas, noting that possibly some 1000 people were involved over the decade.
Canberra author Joel Swadling spoke on the biography he is writing about the late David Branson, a founding member of Splinters as well as a key figure in a wide range of theatrical and musical work as director and performer until his tragic accidental death in 2001. As the work on the biography progresses, from a detailed study of nine boxes of Branson’s papers – now held in the ACT Heritage Library Manuscript Collection http://www.library.act.gov.au/find/history/search/Manuscript_Collections/David_Branson – and through extensive interviews with many of the people who knew and worked with Branson, a picture is forming of the quality and importance of his contribution to theatre arts in Canberra, Australia and internationally.
This writer, educator/theatre critic Frank McKone, spoke on the issue which others also alluded to: how did Splinters’ often anarchic approach to theatre arise in Canberra, the capital city largely populated by public servants, and seen by outsiders as a planned city with no soul. He proposed a theory that in 1968, the 19th year of conservative government, the accidental rise to the Prime Ministership of John Gorton, described as a man who liked to portray himself as a man of the people who enjoyed a beer and a gamble, with a bit of a "larrikin" streak about him, in stark contrast to the previous Liberal Party PMs, stirred the conventional public servants, by osmosis, to reject the control of Canberra’s education system by the authoritarian New South Wales Department, and to demand our own ACT Schools Authority. In starting a new system from scratch, including offering the first Drama courses in Australia at matriculation level, teachers found themselves with the freedom to “negotiate the curriculum” with their students from 1972, very much in the manner that Renald Navilly described in his work with Splinters participants from 1985.
The curator of the CMAG exhibition which included this Symposium, former Splinters member Gavin Findlay who joined after being impressed by the work they presented at the Performance Space, Redfern in Sydney, (http://www.performancespace.com.au/us/history/) then spoke on the archiving of Splinters records and how the materials and history form the basis of his doctoral research designed to recognise the place of Splinters in 20th Century theatre, nationally and internationally.
In discussion, as well as the developments in the schools in the 1970s, the importance of the establishment by Carol Woodrow (http://www.womenaustralia.info/biogs/AWE4882b.htm) of Canberra Children’s Theatre, Reid House Theatre Workshop, Canberra Youth Theatre, The Jigsaw Company, and The Fools’ Gallery during the same period, showed that Canberra was developing its own sense of authorship in both the educational and professional theatre circles, so that by the mid-1980s there was fertile ground for Splinters to grow among young people committed to the crossover of theatre and visual arts.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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