The Drawer Boy by Michael Healey. Mockingbird Theatre Company at Belconnen Arts Centre (Belco Arts), Canberra, August 21-30, 2025.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
August 23
CAST: (in order of appearance)
Angus – Chris Baldock; Miles – Callum Doherty; Morgan – Richard Manning
PRODUCTION TEAM:
Director – Zac Bridgman
Stage Manager – Rhiley Winnett
Lighting Design – Rhiley Winnett and Zac Bridgman
Sound Design – Rhiley Winnett, Zac Bridgman and Chris Baldock
Set Design – Chris Baldock
Set Realisation – Chris Baldock, Richard Manning, cast and crew
Projections – Chris Baldock
Projection, Sound & Lighting Operation – Rhiley Winnett
Costumes – Cast
Props – Chris Baldock, Richard Manning, cast and crew
The Drawer Boy
– meaning the boy who drew – is the perfect choice for the ironically
named Mockingbird Company, for this play is essentially full of irony.
AI says Irony occurs when events or words are the opposite of what is
expected, creating a sense of surprise, humor, or deeper meaning in
literature, rhetoric, and everyday situations.
We can trust
AI on this occasion, because Mockingbird’s production creates all those
things, out of everyday situations, from the opposite of what we expect,
through surprise and humour to an ending with a deeper meaning – even
with a bit of rhetoric thrown in by an over-enthusiastic university
educated budding playwright/actor, Miles, researching what a farmer’s
life is really all about.
But the tricky part of performing this
script, for the director and the actors, is that the characters at first
– and even for the whole first hour-long Act One – are almost
cartoonish caricatures. It reminded me of the nearest Australian
material to compare with this Canadian work, Dad and Dave from Snake Gully,
from an earlier time in history, (the radio show aired from 1937 to
1953), beginning before the World War II which turns out to be the most
important part of The Drawer Boy in Act Two.
Directing and
acting all the silences between those often tacitern ironic words or
surprising outbursts is how the play works. Zac Bridgman and all three
actors got it all right last night. That’s much better than just
alright!
Since I was born in 1941, the year that Angus and Morgan
enlisted in Canada and found themselves in France, though I was close
to being hit by a V-bomb in 1944, I was lucky not to be hit by shrapnel
like Angus.
On the other hand, now in my mid-eighties with a
typically embarrassing erratic short-term memory and no memory for names
of people or places, I appreciated Chris Baldock’s awful, and therefore
thoroughly successful performance of the damaged Angus.
Like
Angus I found the naivety and rapidity of Miles’ speech a bit hard to
take (even though I was guilty in my 20’s of over-the-top drama), which
means that Callum Doherty started well and ended even better when his
understanding of the old men’s lives reached a genuine level of
empathy. Surely now he is ready to write his play about farmers – just
like Michael Healey himself!
And then Richard Manning’s Morgan
held the play together – just as Morgan’s loving, respectful and
determined caring for his friend, from boyhood, through times of war and
hope of marriage together with the tall and the taller English girls,
could hold the mentally disabled Angus together.
I can’t praise 65 year-old Richard too much, since I was his drama teacher in his Year Twelve.
But
I can say how much I enjoyed the cows mooing and chooks chuckling, and
the clever way Angus’s architectural drawing was reflected in the
backdrops. Their farm became the landscape of practical life and
memories, with the right style in the accompanying music, that I am sure
Michael Healey would love.
I had, amazingly, never heard of this 1999 play. But perhaps Canadians have not heard of Dad and Dave from Snake Gully. I suggest an excellent follow-up read is at https://www.canadiantheatre.com/dict.pl?term=The%20Drawer%20Boy
So let’s not take Mockingbird literally. Go see The Drawer Boy.
©Frank McKone, Canberra
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