Tag Archives: literature

84 Charing Cross Road

7 May

Directed by Mark Kilmurry, this is a gloriously charming piece of theatre.

It’s a stage adaptation by James Roose-Evans of an epistolary memoir by American writer Helene Hanff.

For twenty years, Helene exchanges letters with Frank Doel of Marks & Co booksellers of London.

In their correspondence, Helene and Frank mainly discuss books and literature, but one of the many joys of this piece is witnessing their friendship bloom. Helene is witty and brash, and Blazey Best is absolutely brilliant in the role. Frank is more reserved, more polite, and Erik Thomson offers a superb portrait of this gentle soul. (The two leads are supported by the splendid work of Katie Fitchett, Angela Mahlatjie and Brian Meegan. Employees of Marks & Co, they establish it as an environment of kind-hearted, intelligent bonhomie.)

But are Helene and Frank merely types? Obviously, the script leans into commonly assumed differences between Americans and Brits, and in doing so creates delightful fun. But the contrast between the characters also operates on another level, evoking the special relationship between the USA and the UK. (Currently, a relationship being sorely tested.) The play’s action begins in 1948, and I must admit Helene’s keen awareness of Britain’s post-war destitution brought a tear to my eye. If only such generosity of spirit could be more universal.

The more geo-politically conscious among us will know that the special relationship between the two nations derives from many sources. But here the characters’ personal relationship is based on a shared language and a love of literature. Yes, reread that last phrase. I’ve already made one emotional admission in this review. Now, I’ll make another: I saw the entire first act through the sting of salt. Characters who love words! Characters who read! Characters who know that some of the most life-changing conversations you can have are with those whose lives are now complete, those who have left, in literature, their life-earnt treasure of Beauty and Truth.

You might think that a piece of drama constructed from letters is unlikely to succeed. But here it most certainly does, and joyously so, for the epistolary conceit perfectly captures the piece’s main point: the wonder of the written word.

Paul Gilchrist

84 Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff, adapted for the stage by James Roose-Evans, 

at Ensemble until 13 June

ensemble.com.au

Image by Prudence Upton

As You Like It

10 Mar

Directed by Alex Kendall Robson, this is a marvellous presentation of a Shakespearean classic.

Full disclosure: As You Like It is one of my favourite Shakespearean plays, and its protagonist, Rosalind, is certainly my favourite Shakespearean heroine.

Rosalind is whip-smart but no fool. (With such a penchant for paradox, might I wear motley?) What I mean is that Rosalind is witty but humble; she entertains no hubristic dreams that her intelligence makes her superior to the world and its grand forces. This being a romantic comedy, the grand force is Love. Rosalind accepts Love’s power – but knows that this power does not automatically grant romantic Love pre-eminence in the human experience.

Rosalind might have said Love is the silliest of the serious things. Instead Shakespeare gives her lines like these: 

Men have died from time to time and worms have eaten them, but not for love.

Love is merely a madness, and, I tell you, deserves as well a dark house and a whip as madmen do; and the reason why they are not so punished and cured is that the lunacy is so ordinary that the whippers are in love too.

Shakespeare gifts us a heroine who is both bubbly and balanced, who both feels and thinks.

Jade Fuda’s portrayal of Rosalind is absolutely brilliant. And I found it a wonderfully fresh interpretation: more giggly and more fraught than customary, and this tender vulnerability, coupled with Fuda’s total command of the wit, makes her portrayal of Rosalind extraordinarily rich.

As You Like It is one of my favourites for other reasons. It includes one of my favourite scenes in the whole of English drama, the one in which Celia accepts exile rather than part from Rosalind. In a play centring on romantic Love, here’s a shining example of a different type of love: friendship. It’s a scene that always brings tears to my eyes, and played here by Fuda and Larissa Turton as Celia it did so again.   

The play also features some of Shakespeare’s greatest poetry.

And this our life, exempt from public haunt,
Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
Sermons in stones, and good in everything.

So says the Duchess, exiled to the Forest of Arden by her tyrannical sister. The two roles are doubled superbly by Sonya Kerr in a performance that excels both physically and vocally, and with glorious authority juxtaposes compassion and cruelty.

All the world’s a stage,
And all the men and women merely players

So says the melancholy Jaques. Sure, this most famous of lines could simply be read as a case of professional myopia: if Shakespeare had been a footballer he might have said All the world’s a game; or if he had been a risk assessor, All the world’s an accident waiting to happen; or a fisherman, All the world smells of fish. But Shakespeare the dramatist captured something of Life’s bewildering, and perhaps unbearable, lightness – the sense that it all deeply matters, but at the same time, it all doesn’t matter that much. Kendall Robson plays Jaques with splendid humour and a show-stopping poignancy.

O, how bitter a thing it is to look into happiness through another man’s eyes!

So says Orlando, in a stinging moment when it seems his brother has secured love but he never will. Traditionally, Orlando is a challenging role; lover of the effervescent Rosalind, there’s always the danger he may not seem worthy of her, a smaller man than Love’s grand game of hide-and-seek in which he is a prime participant. But here, Pat Mandziy creates a magnificent Orlando, a beautiful balance of confusion and charisma.  

So, as I suggested, a play of unparalleled poetry. (And I think we get almost the whole thing!) The entire ensemble is exemplary; with a mastery of the Elizabethan language and a complete commitment to comic exuberance, we’re invited to a world of delight.

Paul Gilchrist

As You Like It by William Shakespeare

presented by Fingerless Theatre

at Flight Path Theatre until March 14

flightpaththeatre.org

Image by Phil Erbacher