A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams. Free Rain Theatre at ACT Hub June 19-29 2024.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
June 26
Directed by Anne Somes
Associate Director: Dr Cate Clelland
Set Design: Dr Cate Clelland and Ron Abrahams
Costume Design: Fiona Leach; Lighting Design: Craig Muller
Sound Design: Neville Pye; Sound & Lighting Operator: Maggie Hawkins
Stage Manager: Maggie Hawkins
Vocal and Dialect Coach: Sarah Chalmers; Intimacy Co-ordinator: Karen Vickery
Marketing Director: Olivia Wenholz
Photography: Promotional – Janelle McMenamin; Production – Jane Duong
Cast: Ensemble:
Amy Kowalczuk as Blanche DuBois James Morgan
Alex Hoskison as Stanley Kowalski Mercy Lelei
Meaghan Stewart as Stella Kowalski David Bennett
Lachlan Ruffy as Harold Mitchell Olivia Wenholz
Sarah Hull as Eunice Hubbel Rina Onorato
Tim Stiles as Steve Hubbel
Lachlan Elderton as Pablo Gonzales
“I don’t want reality” says Blanche DuBois in – perhaps – one of her more lucid moments. What makes Free Rain’s production of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire
brilliant is how real Amy Kowalczuk makes that terribly disturbed
character understandable; and how our empathy is engaged by Meaghan
Stewart’s realisation of the impossibility of her sister’s situation.
Williams,
of course, was the brilliant writer. Perhaps a bit like Blanche he had
his fantasies, calling himself “Tennessee” rather than Thomas Lanier
Williams III (March 26, 1911 – February 25, 1983), but then becoming
considered, along with contemporaries Eugene O'Neill and Arthur Miller,
one of the three foremost playwrights of 20th-century American drama.
Putting
this all together I need a better word for the work of all the actors,
designers, coaches, managers and directors in this Streetcar – Exquisite.
As in the best-cut jewellery, the natural brilliance is brought out in
all the detailed facets. In this play about the contrasting lives of
the two sisters, Blanche and Stella DuBois, the horror of emotional
collapse which Amy captures is matched by the struggle Meaghan reveals
that we all must face in coming to terms with reality.
And only
then do we see it is the same for the men, represented by the man full
of self-entitlement, Stanley, whom Stella has married; and Mitchell,
hoping for and seeking comfort in Blanche while having to compete with
the Stanleys of the male world.
And then it is amazing to reflect
on the surrounding figures: the next door neighbours; the poker
players; the passers-by in the street, all played with just the right
simple clarity by the ensemble members.
I had arrived on a
freezing-cold night in a somewhat distant mood at the old wooden Hub. I
left positively excited at how such top quality drama could take me out
of the immediate into such a warmer understanding of humanity.
After
that, there are more reasons to see the play and, I think, this
production. Though Free Rain is an amateur company, I would hope that a
way can be found to extend the run of their A Streetcar Named Desire,
or take it to other venues. It would certainly suit my favourite
intimate theatre, Ensemble, in Sydney. It’s set would not need much
adjustment there, and would also work on stages like the Canberra
Theatre Centre Playhouse.
The quality of the acting, voice work
and movement is all at professional standard. The fact that this is
true of Canberra’s small theatre productions at ACT Hub, The Mill and
Queanbeyan Performing Arts Centre has been under discussion for a long
time, suggesting that we should be touring companies out as well as
touring companies in. In recent times Jordan Best's Playhouse Creatures was taken to the 16th Mondial du Théâtre in Monaco, and toured in Victoria, NSW and Queensland, but it’s a long time now since Women on a Shoestring, when I was writing in 1999:
At the Crossroads,
reviewed in The Canberra Times at its first presentation in February
1998, was described as "polished theatre from a longstanding, very
experienced team, designed to be toured to city and country venues
around Australia". Based on stories gathered from people in the bush,
the play tempered an examination of racist attitudes - through the
experience of a middle-class country woman whose mother is Aboriginal -
with clever use of humour, movement and song. How has the tour gone, I
wondered, as I sat down at the café in Gorman House to talk with the Women on a Shoestring: Camilla Blunden, Julie Ross and Chrissie Shaw.
[ https://frankmckone2.blogspot.com/search?q=Women+on+a+Shoestring ]
I’m
almost an historical monument myself now, but I think the issues of
male and female relationships, with some touching on male-male and
female-female lived experiences, which are central to the 1947 play by
Tennessee Williams, are as important to deal with today is they were
then – especially when it comes to women’s emotional and intellectual
stability under the new pressures of what is called ‘social’ media and
our new understanding of ‘cohesive control’.
As a homosexual man
himself (before the word ‘gay’), and having a sister who may have been a
model for Blanche, Williams’ plays are surely exemplary for wider
presentation today. There’s an interesting study at https://theses.cz/id/7ogk1x/Sedlackova_bakalarska_prace.pdf .
And
finally, in our local community, this production has a fascinating
twist. How could it be possible that Amy Kowalczuk, whom I mentioned in
reviewing her first directing work [ The Boys - http://ccc-canberracriticscircle.blogspot.com/2022/04/the-boys_16.html ], - saying that many
will know her as Amy Dunham. I must raise the possibility-of-bias
flag, since I taught her parents, Kathleen Montgomery and Trevor Dunham,
in the first drama class at Hawker College in 1976/77, when they
directed, with Sue Richards, the first student written and directed show
– a rock/folk musical Anna. It’s great to see theatrical tradition continuing through the generations. – now has married into the Polish family Kowalczuk!
Not quite Tennessee Williams’ ‘Kowalski’?
Kowalczuk Name Meaning: Polish: patronymic from Kowal ‘blacksmith’.
https://www.familysearch.org/en/surname?surname=Kowalczuk
So there is a special resonance when, in Streetcar,
Stanley (what an English-sounding name) yells at Blanche in frustration
that “Polish people are called Poles. I am NOT a Polack.” Which in
Australia in 1947 would have been to call him a Wog. Wogs in Australia
have turned the insult on its head in recent times, as a joke. Yet I
remember, when performing, in 1965, Lick Jimmy, the next-door Chinese
greengrocer in Ruth Park’s The Harp in the South, written
in 1948, how the way my character was presented – though essentially
sympathetically – as a bit of a joke because I couldn’t speak English.
My entrances, exits and returns were only because I had to use the
Darcy’s toilet – with appropriate miming choreography.
In Free
Rain’s production Alex Hoskison does a terrific job of making the
deprecating insult a genuinely serious issue for Stanley Kowalski, as it
should be today. Yet it seems from the political use of
anti-immigration sentiment that assumptions about social class and
ethnic distinctions are not yet resolved.
In fact, the Poles in
Williams’ American city seem to be as poor as the Irish in Ruth Park’s
Surry Hills in Sydney in 1948. Blanche can’t believe that her sister –
born into the French slave-owning upper class of the Mississippi – could
have married a Polack, even though she admits that their plantation
property is ‘lost’. It is Stanley who intelligently queries what has
happened to the money, but Blanche can’t explain.
So rather
than see the play as a social-sexual psychological drama, you may see
Blanche’s breakdown as the effect of social change bringing her down
from seeing herself as part of French colonial aristocracy – an
inevitable social change in an America which has just won World War II.
Stanley, then represents the new sense of self-entitlement that some would say is at the centre of the USA today.
What a play! What a performance! What a production success!
L to R: Meaghan Stewart as Stella Kowalski; Alex Hoskison as Stanley Kowalski Lachlan Ruffy as Harold 'Mitch' Mitchell; Amy Kowalczuk as Blanche DuBois |
Amy Kowalczuk as Blanche DuBois; Meaghan Stewart as Stella Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams Free Rain Theatre, Canberra 2024 Photos: Jane Duong |
© Frank McKone, Canberra
No comments:
Post a Comment