Fragments by Maura Pierlot. The Street Theatre, Canberra, October 23 – 27, 2019.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
October 24
Creatives: Director - Shelly Higgs; Stage & Costume Design - Imogen Keen; Sound Design – Kyle Sheedy; Lighting Design - James Tighe; Cultural Consultant - Daniel Berthon
Cast (in order of appearance):
Tom Bryson Will
Marni Mount Freya
Prithvi Saxena Vijay
Erin Pierlot Reena
Linda Chen Mila
Damon Baudin Nicky
Zane Menegazzo Mason
Holly Johnson Lexy
Fragments
has a didactic purpose, especially appropriate at this time of year as
young people (in the southern hemisphere) complete their Year 12
assessment and receive their Australian Tertiary Admission Rank (ATAR)
results. The author writes: “Please help create awareness about mental
health issues, while reaching out to those who may be struggling, now
and in the weeks ahead.”
It’s a kind of theatre-in-education as
much for parents and children (and even grandparents) as for social
decision-makers in modern times. I wondered if the ubiquitous nature of
social media on the internet has made things worse than in my time in
the 1950s facing what Maura Pierlot describes: “Fragments
embodies the theme that stress at home, at school and in life is
challenging young people beyond their usual coping abilities, often
leaving them disenfranchised and vulnerable.”
These eight young
people have the same central concern that I remember: is my outward
presentation true to my real internal self? Under the onslaught of 24/7
Instagram images and over-the-top positive and negative judgemental
commentary from peers, I think struggling through that ten-year period
from, say, 14 to 24, which I remember well, is made far more fearful for
this generation.
No wonder mental health issues are so much
more on the public agenda today than in yesteryear. So it should be,
and this play has a valuable role to play.
The concept of
fragmentation within each character’s personal perception of themselves
and between themselves and others is displayed visually in Imogen Keen’s
use of solid black cubical rostra blocks, carried about, put in place,
stood upon and even thrown; contrasted with sheets of almost-transparent
material, some complete rectangles like windows, some sharply shaped
like accidentally dropped window glass. Characters carry these about at
times, looking into them as mirrors, looking through them, being seen
through them: looking always in danger of shattering.
Lighting
was used very effectively to emphasise the points of separation and
isolation – and finally to reach a general sense of hope, the last word
spoken. Sound provided a background of current music and song, which
gave the young characters a common context; while action was often
punctuated by the beeps, ringtones and notification tones we constantly
have to respond to from our smartphones. And, I thought, G5 is only
just beginning to make its presence known!
Each of the eight
speak to us directly, and each actor performed very realistically. This
is an important achievement on each of their parts, because being
‘fragments’ means that there is very little direct interaction, and no
throughline for an actor to use in developing new understanding within a
character.
The situation, as I understood it, was that Mason,
as school captain, has to give a speech to the school as he graduates at
the end of Year 12. Each character is different in their own
particular way from any of the others. The issues which arise include
at least racism, sexuality, body image, parental academic expectations,
parental divorce, the education system’s control of students’ future
possibilities, and the Black Dog - which, as Mason points out, is not
the friendly trusting pet you want to pat.
The theatre experience
backgrounds of these young performers, not very much older than their
characters, listed on the online program at http://www.thestreet.org.au/shows/fragments-maura-pierlot
is in itself a positive record of the school, youth theatre and young
persons’ professional training available in Canberra and further
afield. The results shown in Fragments represents the very hope
that the play concludes with. Here are young people, speaking through
Maura Pierlot’s characters, who are achieving what she hopes: “I wanted
to explore the healing that may come from looking outwards – from our
connectedness to others and our realisation that we are not alone.”
This is what theatre does, and this production does it very well.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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