The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood. Crouching Giraffe in association with Papermoon Theatre at Canberra Theatre Centre, Courtyard Studio, July 7 – 17, 2021.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
July 9
Creatives: Cast:
Director – Kate Blackhurst Penelope – Elaine Noon
Vocal Coach – Tony Turner Telemachus/Maid – Martha Russell
Sound design – Neville Pye Melantho/Maid – Emily Smith
Lighting Design – Stephen Still Antinous/Maid – Tijana Kovac
Original Music – Glenn Gore Phillips Maid – Milena Rafic
Choreography – Brooke Thomas Naiad Mother/Maid – Sarah Hull
Set Design – Cate Clelland Eurycleia/Maid – Carolyn Eccles
Costumes – Annie Kay Oracle/Maid – Emily Ridge
Properties – Jessica Dickie Icarius/Maid – Shauna Priest
Odysseus/Maid – Heidi Silberman
Laertes/Maid – Jess Waterhouse
Helen/Maid – Victoria Dixon
Anticleia/Maid – Sure Gore Phillips
Margaret Atwood, of The Handmaids’ Tale fame, dedicates her novella, The Penelopiad,
“For my family”. I wonder how her family felt on reading, and later
watching, the often touching but ultimately horrifying story of
Penelope, the wife of the putative hero, Odysseus, who rescued Helen of
Troy.
Now, speaking from Hades, “being dead – since achieving
this state of bonelessness, liplessness, breastlessness” – that is, her
story being forgotten or never even recorded – Penelope begins with a
warning to us all. “I’ve learned some things I would rather not know,
as one does when listening at windows or opening other people’s
letters. You think you’d like to read minds? Think again.”
Of
course, as Elaine Noon spoke these words, we all immediately fell into
Atwood’s trap, held there for two hours’ traffic on the stage - and even
beyond the Maids’ last words, as they sprout feathers, and fly away as
owls:
we took the blame
it was not fair
but now we’re here
we’re all here too
the same as you
and now we follow
you, we find you
now, we call
to you to you
too wit too woo
too wit too woo
too woo
In
some other productions, a long table, behind which Penelope sits, is a
central static fixture. What I like especially about Cate Clelland’s
set is its flexibility so that movement is at the core of the drama:
it’s a story told in action, in a way I imagine similar to the way
mythical stories of Aboriginal people are performed, as much in dance
and song as in speech.
In one production (isn’t Youtube
marvellous?), Odysseus is played by a man. For me it seems essential to
have the whole story presented by 13 women because the play is grounded
in the perspective that only women can have. When Heidi Silberman, one
of Penelope’s close maids, takes on the role of Odysseus, there is
humour and irony which does not happen if a man is brought in for that
role. The same is true later when the roles of the men suitors, who
raped the maids in the story, are played by those very women.
There
is a very nice interview with two women in a production which, I think,
has the right ‘feel’. Uploaded by Xtra Magazine at
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TcvHkNnkPLE
it’s
about the Nightwood Theatre production: “Margaret Atwood's The
Penelopiad makes its Toronto remount at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre”.
Perhaps Margaret Atwood herself was there.
I like, too, the
symbolism built into the set design, of the huge woven wall hangings
which seem to represent the stage as in Ancient Greek times, and perhaps
were woven by Penelope and her Maids. The costumes, too, take us
seemingly back to Ancient Greece, but give us a range of distinct
characters as members of the Chorus take on roles in the story.
The
music, voicing and singing, part and in unison, also do more than form a
sound-track. The production, seemingly simple in the intimate
small-scale Studio space, has all the elements of drama working together
with purpose and artistic integrity.
This Penelopiad
is my kind of theatre – strong in its intention; powerful in its effect
and its message. When I hear the occasional boobook owl, the
currawongs whooping or the sulphur crested cockatoos screeching every
day around my home, I know Penelope and her Maids are reminding me that
“we took the blame / it was not fair”.
Cate Clelland's set design for The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood Crouching Giraffe, Canberra 2021 |
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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