The House of Bernarda Alba

TAPAC Theatre, Western Springs, Auckland

11/06/2010 - 19/06/2010

Production Details



HOT BLOODED SPANISH THEATRE STAMPEDES THE TAPAC STAGE! 

One of the most celebrated European dramas of the 20th century features a stunning female cast featuring of New Zealand’s front-runners of the stage and screen. TAPAC houses a rousing performance of Federico Garcia Lorca’s compelling play, The House of Bernarda Alba from June 10th 2010.

A deeply coded political photograph of a state in civil unrest, the formidable matriarch Bernarda Alba rules over a house in mourning with an iron fist, but cannot stop her five precious daughters from running into the lion’s jaws. Following the gangland execution of her husband, Bernarda will do anything to safeguard her family’s dubious fortune and the future of her daughters. Five headstrong daughters cooped up in the family home in an emotionally charged atmosphere of bitter rivalry and repressed sexuality make that an epic challenge. Bernarda’s cruel tyranny over her daughters foreshadows the stifling nature of Franco’s fascist regime.

Finished by Lorca shortly before he was executed in Spain for his left-wing politics, The House Of Bernarda Alba connects deeply with one of Aotearoa’s most famed and intrinsic attributes: as a sensitive and steadfast defender of human rights and political justice. A punch packed with poise and elegance, it will wake you up to the world around you – filled with a resounding image of repression, and moving with dramatic pace.  Bottled emotions of jealousy, love, laughter and tragedy are set in a cage in which the daughters struggle to be free of before their bones are crushed from Bernarda’s fierce containment.

Ready and eager to reach you, Phundmi was created in 1996 ago by Nisha Madhan and Liesha Ward Knox, each with their own personalized stamps held high and ready to make their mark on the acting and theatre worlds. After attaining their degree from Unitec’s School of Performing and Screen Arts, they produced “Shakespeare Unbar’d” which played to sell out audience at Auckland’s Irish pub The Dog’s Bollix.

Critically acclaimed Director Margaret-Mary Hollins has built a reputation on theatrically adventurous and visually inventive work and her signature on this work will be unmistakable. Directing a core cast of nine divine, hot blooded exemplary actresses (Ward Knox, Madhan, Michelle Hine, Yvette Parsons, Sylvia Rands, Sarah Gallagher, Cyan Yasmine Corwine, Tania Anderson, Jodie Hillock) and supported by a chorus of 20 promising young actors from the Western Springs Community, The House Of Bernarda Alba is a play that challenges the throne of authority and demands accountability for its actions.

The House Of Bernarda Alba plays
10th – 19th June 2010, 7pm (Saturday 8pm, Sunday at 7pm)
Opening Night 11th June
Matinee performance at 2pm on Saturday 19th June
TAPAC, 100 Motions Road, Western Springs, Auckland
Bookings through TAPAC – 09 845 0295 ext. 1 or robin@tapac.org.nz   


FEATURING:
Bernarda: Michele Hine
Poncia: Sylvia Rands
Maria Josefa/Prudencia: Yvette Parsons
Maid: Tania Anderson
Angustias: Sarah Gallagher
Magdelena: Rashmi Pilapitiya
Ameilia: Liesha Ward Knox
Martirio: Jodie Hillock
Adela: Nisha Madhan
CHORUS led by Laurel Devenie

COSTUMES by Cyan Yasmin Corwine
LIGHTS by Michael Craven
SET by Barnie Duncan
CURTAINS by Eleanor Riley
PUBLICITY: Elephant Publicity   



Passionate reworking of a classic

Review by Paul Simei-Barton 14th Jun 2010

Lightness and humour brought to a work that speaks of dark political times

On one level The House of Bernarda Alba is a documentary study of domesticity in a 1930s Andalusian village, but by relentlessly focusing on one particular household, Spanish playwright Federico Lorca delivers a brilliantly penetrating analysis of the psychology of authoritarian politics.

Written in 1936, a few months before Lorca was executed by Franco’s thugs, the play has achieved iconic status as a 20th century classic largely because of its remarkable prescience about Europe’s life-and-death struggle with fascism.

Margaret Hollins’ thoughtfully crafted production emphasises the contemporary relevance of the work with some chilling allusions to culturally sanctioned honour killings that persist within the inward-looking ethnic communities that are part of any modern multicultural city. [More]
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Powerfully downbeat

Review by Nik Smythe 12th Jun 2010

This upstanding production of Federico Garcia Lorca’s final tragedy, completed just before his own tragic demise, does challenge certain expectations I might have about Spanish culture – isn’t it always feisty and energetic, spitting with the fire of the duende? Certainly there is energy in Margaret Mary Hollins’ intriguing version here, though played for the most part with a more low-key, sombre tone. 

There is great passion too, albeit repressed by strict example of the most repressed of them all, matriarch Bernarda herself (Michelle Hine), whose long-subdued dreams and desires have completely expired. Her own mother’s and five daughters’ dreams are to varying degrees intact however, with some even nurturing ideas of escaping somehow from their mother’s overprotective clutches. 

The story opens at the funeral of her second husband, father of four of her five daughters, but there is little sense of genuine mourning, stifled as it is by the latent tension permeating the household. According to family tradition, they are now to remain in mourning for eight years. It seems inevitable that despite any honest effort to dutifully control her urges, each sister will in her own way yearn for a sweeter existence. 

The eldest daughter is the ‘only truly wealthy’ one, thanks to an inheritance from her father, Bernarda’s first husband, so she is to be engaged to the town’s biggest heartthrob. But everyone can see it’s just her money he’s after, and some of her younger prettier sisters have their own designs on her supposedly handsome fiancé (whom only ever ‘appears’ offstage).

The all-female cast is very well appointed on the whole. Hine’s Bernarda Alba is a dried up, bitter husk, her fierce pride matched only by her desperate will to avoid any possibility of disrepute to her household. Sylvia Rands gives a remarkable turn as chief housekeeper Poncia, eyes and ears of the house and central raconteur. Her numerous tales and pointed remarks are played with such naturalism it’s almost surreal.

Sarah Gallagher plays Augustias, the eldest and odd-one-out, with believable anguish and spite, though she seems considerably younger than 39 and altogether less unattractive than the script implies. At 30, Magdalena (Rashmi Pilapataya) is the eldest of the four full sisters with an appropriately authoritative yet loving demeanour. As middle sister Amelia, Liesha Ward Knox appears the most contented with her lot, wide-eyed innocence tempered by a naive superstition bordering on paranoia. 

24 year-old Martirio (Jodie Hillock) has the greatest commitment to observing her mother’s decree, dutifully denying her own inner desire for the greater good. She’s also the closest friend to their eccentric eighty-year-old grandmother Maria Josefa, as played in glorious dementia by Yvette Parsons, with the sense that someone so old and crazy may perhaps actually be on to something when you look at the rest of the family.

Producer, promoter and project co-founder Nisha Madhan plays the youngest, Adela – the fresh-faced personification of hopeful youth and selfish defiance. Others may dream as much as she of finding a better life, but with her doe-eyes and other desirable attributes she works hardest to make the dream into reality.

Hollins injects her trademark quirk-factor into the work without ever seeming indulgent as the fairly realistic direction is punctuated with occasional passing moments of surrealism.

Impressive musical choruses (directed by Laurel Devenie, co-sound designer with Chris O’Connor) and effective soundscapes are provided by the twenty or so extras, at times running their ruckus all over the complex to make distant sounds of processions and riots and so on. 

In the climactic scene as Martirio and Adela face off, the stunt fighting comes off a tad choreographed, the lack of visceral substance made conspicuous by its presence in all the other elements of the work.

The suitably classical production design does not attempt to portray a definitive Spanish setting. Staged in the round and capably lit by Michael Craven, Barnie Duncan’s minimal set involves a white tile floor, simple wooden chairs and pews around the edges with an elegant divan in the centre beneath a fancy crystalesque chandelier.

The simple, elegant costumes by Cyan Corwine are predominately black and white, with some light earth tones on the servants. Two notable exceptions are the inappropriate green frock Adela wears on the day of her father’s funeral and the striking red dress worn by the viola player that accompanies Grandmother’s delusional fantasising.

Ultimately I feel the powerful yet downbeat performances reflect our own culture’s classic repression and stony-faced reticence, though somehow the two-plus hours seem to pass fairly quickly. I am aware this review contains an abundant use of words like ‘yet’, ‘seem’, ‘appears’, ‘but’, ‘although’ etc, but with such a richly tangled tale of pretensions and secrets there’s no way around it. 

Finally, the beautifully conceived yet modestly unaccredited programme, hand sewn in black lace, has been predicted by some to be Best Programme winner at the next Hackman Awards. 

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