Our Country’s Good by Timberlake Wertenbaker, based on the novel The Playmaker by Tom Keneally. Canberra REP Theatre, September 8-24 2022.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
September 21
Director – Karen Vickery; Assistant Director – Liz de Toth
Set Designer – Michael Sparks; Props – Antonia Kitzel
Lighting Designer – Mike Moloney; Sound Designer – Neville Pye
Fighting/Movement Assistance – Max Gambale and Ylaria Rogers
Stage Manager – David Goodbody
Ensemble Cast
Capt. Arthur Phillip / John Wisehammer Amy Crawford
Lt. Will Dawes / Liz Morden Alexandra Pelvin
Lt. George Johnston / Duckling Smith / Meg Long Meaghan Stewart
2nd Lt. Ralph Clark Callum Wilson
Capt. Watkin Tench / Black Caesar Gaurav Pant
Robert Sideway / Capt. David Collins Isabelle Gurney
Dabby Bryant / 2nd Lt. William Faddy Kate Blackhurst
Maj. Robbie Ross / Ketch Freeman Maurice Downing
Capt. Jemmy Campbell / MIDN Harry Brewer /
John Arscott Paul Sweeney
Mary Brenham / Rev. Johnson Rosangela Fasano
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Virtually
every word Tom Keneally has ever written has suggested meanings and
implications beyond the obvious. In this work his original title tells
us that Second Lieutenant Ralph Clark is not only putting on a stage
play – The Recruiting Officer – but is making a move to
change society for the better. In his speech to his actors as they are
about to perform, he emphasises that they must be entertaining, and
intelligible.
George Farquhar’s 1706 comedy about the social and
sexual exploits of army officers was still so popular that in 1789 in
Australia – at the time of the First Fleet invading Eora Country to
create the Penal Colony of New South Wales – Clark had at hand two
copies of the play and a supply of convicts, sent down for 7 years’
exile, for actors. The play would entertain his fellow officers, while
perhaps educating the often-illiterate convicts and thus improve their
future prospects.
The title of the play, adapted from
Keneally’s 1987 novel by Wertenbaker for its first staging at the Royal
Court Theatre, London in 1988, captures the irony of the convicts being
removed from England – for that country’s good – while the putting on of
the satirical comedy by those convicts was for our country’s good –
that is for the Australia which the penal colony became.
Without a
doubt, REP’s putting on this play after another 30-odd years, is
absolutely relevant as the issues of the treatment of women and
indigenous people, and the misuse of military force and the acceptance
of violent behaviour are just as disturbing today as they were in 1988
and 1789. Karen Vickery’s directing of Our Country’s Good
is as important now for us in Canberra – the capital of Australia – as
was Max Stafford-Clark’s 1988 production in London – the capital of the
United Kingdom which has just put on such an overwhelming performance to
memorialise the late Queen Elizabeth II – and as was the presentation
of The Recruiting Officer, recorded in the diary of Watkin Tench and published in his Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay in 1789.
Wikipedia
records “The play shows the class system in the convict camp and
discusses themes such as sexuality, punishment, the Georgian judicial
system, and the idea that it is possible for ‘theatre to be a humanising
force’”. We may wonder about our past in the days of George III and
the future of Charles III, William V and George VII. With all this
history behind and before us, does REP’s production of Our Country’s Good stand up strong enough?
On
the whole it does, but in one part it needs improvement. I was unable
to see the show until late in its run, and felt disappointed there was
not a full house last night. Competition from the late Queen’s funeral
may have been a factor; or perhaps it was the lack of clarity of the
speech of several performers that kept audience numbers lower rather
than building. It was Second Lieutenant Ralph Clark that sparked my
concern: not all the performance was “intelligible”.
Our Country’s Good
succeeded in its essentials, where Vickery’s direction of the action
and mood, and characterisation, made us come to grips with the reality
of people being whipped with 100 lashes, and even 300 lashes; with the
impossibility of true justice when death by hanging was the standard;
when trauma destroys relationships; and laughter at is so different from laughter with.
But
I found, in attempting to represent the characters through their vocal
accents from the many different parts of Britain that the real convicts
came from (I recognised at least Devon or Somerset, possibly Scottish
and Cockney) very often I could not understand the actual words being
spoken. Often, too, in presenting the agressiveness especially in the
male characters, voices could sound like barking angry mastiff dogs –
which certainly got the feeling through – but the actual words and what
the character, and Tom Keneally, meant was lost in action.
It
was understandable that I would have had to listen hard to the character
from Madagascar (Black Caesar), and Gaurav Pant succeeded in his speech
about wanting to die in his own country, and not in Australia, in
making a stand for indigenous people, even though the reasonable
decision had been made to leave out Keneally’s original unnamed
character, An Aboriginal Australian. In her Director’s Note, Vickery
writes “With the passage of 34 years the representation of our First
Peoples in the play is problematic, even tokenistic”, after she
consulted with Aboriginal and Torres Strait artists.
I think, on
reflection, that more scenes could have gained from clearer articulation
of the words, including particularly for the ‘barking’ parts of the
Major and the Captain, to create more subtlety of emotion for us to
respond to. Scenes that were the strongest for me were when Liz is
measured up for hanging; where she finally decides to speak in her own
defence; and those emotional scenes between Harry Brewer and Duckling
Smith.
A notable success in this production was the set design
which worked so well without the need for changes for so many different
settings – which is also praise for the directing of movement, exits and
entrances, with complex lighting which shifted our imaginations
smoothly from scene to scene.
Overall then this production of a
demanding play achieves the key intention of Tom Keneally, which the
original director and writer/adaptor described after seeing a play
performed in Wormwood Scrubs prison: “in prison conditions, theatre can
be hugely heartening and influential … and we saw immediately how doing a
play could become absolutely absorbing if you were incarcerated”. Like
the convicts they observed, we “were, at least momentarily, civilised
human beings”.
[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Country%27s_Good ]
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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