The One by Vanessa Bates. Ensemble Theatre, Sydney, July 22 – August 27, 2022.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
Opening Night July 28
Cast
Helen - Gabrielle Chan; Mel - Angie Diaz; Jess - Aileen Huynh
Cal - Damien Strouthos; Eric - Shan-Ree Tan
Understudies: Sam O’sullivan, Monica Sayers & Gareth Yuen
Creatives
Director - Darren Yap
Assistant Director - Sophie Kelly; Dramaturg - Sarah Odillo Maher
Set & Costume Designer - Nick Fry
Lighting Designer - Verity Hampson
Composer & Sound Designer - Michael Tan
Choreographer - Angie Diaz
Makeup Artist, Hair & Wig Stylist - Lindsey Chapman
Photos by Prudence Upton
In this new play by Vanessa Bates, the story of The One is complicated – in the right sense for comedy, but equally seriously for people coping with living between cultures, of different kinds. Multiculturalism is not always so amusing when it’s all in one family.
Eric and Mel re-enact their childhood performance Shan-Ree Tan and Angie Diaz in The One by Vanessa Bates |
In
Act One the play is clearly written to be funny – and it is. But you
may sense there’s something odd about the brother, Eric, and his
seemingly dominating sister, Mel; about Mel’s relationship with her
boyfriend Cal – which began when they appeared together on a reality
‘Getting Married’ TV show; and about what they all think of Eric and
Mel’s Malaysian mother, Helen.
That’s all complicated enough
until Jess, the Chinese waitress now running Jim’s Oriental Restaurant,
blasts her way into the younger one’s attempt to take Helen down memory
lane – not to celebrate her birthday but, as she says, to celebrate her
survival.
Aileen Huynh as Jess |
Aileen Huynh (Jess) and Gabrielle Chan as Helen at the table set with the lazy susan |
But then, if you felt just a bit tentative about why you were laughing in Act One, Act Two, focussed around the lazy susan of what might have been an Aussie Chinese restaurant celebration, jumps up to an unexpected – and terribly funny – level of absurdity until, equally unexpectedly, laughter at becomes empathy with each member, each one, of this complicated family. In particular, what will Mel decide about her future with Cal, considering what happened about the children’s father?
Damien Strouthos and Angie Diaz as Cal and Mel in The One |
Vanessa
Bates’ writing is highly original because she takes the risk of sitting
on the knife-edge where the absurdity of reality is at the same time
devastating and comic. Director Darren Yap and his design team match
the author’s originality in every way – in the use of video, props and
stage furniture, choreography (when 9 and 12 the brother and sister had
won an Australian Asian Ballroom Dancing competition!); not forgetting
make-up, hair and costume (for Eric in particular) – and especially the
creation in sound of the final central character, Fifi / Spike: Helen’s dog, who is The One who really matters.
The
community feeling which is the mark of Ensemble Theatre becomes part of
the play as we find ourselves being the characters’ audience as well as
the actors’ audience – another risky but clever device by Vanessa
Bates. So even while Australians’ racism is exposed, the curtain call
is a celebration of the real culturally-mixed cast of quite
extraordinary performers.
Another Ensemble success not to be missed.
Angie Diaz and Shan-Ree Tan as sister and brother Mel and Eric lighting joss sticks together in The One by Vanessa Bates Ensemble Theatre, Sydney 2022 |
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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