MERELY TO BE NORMAL… Season Two

Studio 77, Victoria University, 77 Fairlie Tce, Kelburn, Wellington

24/07/2013 - 27/07/2013

Production Details



”Nobody realises that some people expend tremendous energy merely to be normal” – Albert Camus 

For two weeks in July, Victoria University’s Studio 77 will be transformed into a hub for theatrical exploration and adventure as six young directors present a smorgasbord of plays to invigorate and excite the Wellington community. The Victoria University of Wellington Theatre Honours Directing course culminates in six unique plays to be performed across two seasons under the title Merely to be Normal. Season One sees three directors engaging with international works making their New Zealand premieres. Season Two celebrates three established writers as great texts are reimagined by our directors. 

Merely to be Normal is the culmination of an artistic journey. At the business end of their directing course and of their university careers, the six young theatre practitioners are eager to open a conversation about the work with the evenings audience. Audience members will be invited to chat with the directors before and after the show and the directors are opening up their rehearsal room in an online blog. 

Taking its name from an Albert Camus quote, Merely to be Normal reminds our audience that theatre is a place to explore what it means to be a human. Merely to be Normal will take audiences on a journey through theatrical as well. From absurdism to a violent satire, from British in-yer-face to a Kiwi comedy, Merely to be Normal is home to an eclectic range of plays. 

SEASON TWO 

Two short works by legendary playwright Samuel Beckett are brought to life by Jonathan Price. Fans of Waiting for Godot will recognise the dystopian world of Rough for Theatre 1 in which two crippled men meet on a street corner. Then, in Ohio Impromptu, we hear the final pages of a story of profound loss being read. It has taken the whole night to read, and now, dawn is just about to break. 

Edward Albee’s evergreen one-act play, The Zoo Story, is directed by Samuel Phillips. This surprising, darkly humorous, menacing drama demonstrates Albee’s trademark masterful storytelling and wry insights into the absurdism of American Life. Set in Central Park, the play follows Jerry who has just been to the Zoo, and is now itching to tell someone about it. 

Season two ends with a play by well-known New Zealand playwright, Jo Randerson. Bronwyn Cheyne directs Fold, structured around a series of aimless parties thrown by the ‘Party-Goers’. Fold is a study of people wrapped up in their own world, attempting to make some sense of their lives and ‘sick’ society. 

Production Details: 

Studio 77 – 77 Fairlie Terrace, Kelburn, Wellington
Season 2: 24th-27th July 7-9pm
Tickets: $15 Waged, $8 Concession
Bookings: theatre@vuw.ac.nz or 04 463 5359


The Zoo Story by Edward Albee

Directed by Samuel Phillips

Cast:

Peter                           Patrick Hunn

Jerry                            Barney Olsen

Crew:

Stage Manager           Brett Reid

Lighting Design           Rowan McShane

Technical Operation  Conner Driver-Burgess

Thanks:                       Nick Zwart and Alex Greig

Produced by arrangement with the Licensor, Estate of Samuel Beckett c/- Curtis Brown (Aust) Pty Ltd

 

Ohio Impromptu + Rough for Theatre 1 by Samuel Beckett

Directed by Jonathan Price

Cast:

Reader + A                  Patrick Carroll

Listener + B                 James Cain

Crew:

Set Design                   Debbie Fish

Lighting Design           Rowan McShane

Technical Operation  Conner Driver-Burgess

 

Fold by Jo Randerson

Directed by Bronwyn Cheyne

Cast:

Karen                          Kashmir Postel

Eileen                          Jess Old

Pascall                         Jake Brown

Roger                          Nick Andrews

John                            Bruce Colban

Crew:

Assistant Director      Bridget Chalmers

Set+Costume Design  Rose Kynoch

Sound Design             Rowan McShane

Sound Assistants        Lana Burns, Ashleigh Flynn, Ashleigh Hume

Lighting Design +        Conner Driver-Burgess

Technical Operation

Thanks:                       Roseneath Centennial Ragtime Band, Uther Dean

This version of Fold has been slightly abridged by director Bronwyn Cheyne



Some good new directing talent coming through

Review by John Smythe 25th Jul 2013

If the Season One trio was more about distinguishing reality from fantasy, the plays that make up Season Two are more clearly aligned to the umbrella title, Merely To Be Normal. Most have been trimmed to meet the time and resource specifications necessarily imposed in this Honours level exercise.

Edward Albee’s first play, The Zoo Story – of which we get the first half: ‘The Story of Jerry and The Dog’ – compares and contrasts the ‘normal’ lives of two very different men who randomly meet in Manhattan’s Central Park.

Peter (Patrick Hunn), a publishing executive reading a book on a park bench, turns out to live between Lexington and Third Avenue, on Seventy-fourth Street, with a wife, two daughters, cats and two parakeets.

But it is Jerry (Barney Olsen) who has been to the zoo and has a story to tell. And ‘home’ for him is “a laughably small room” on the top floor of a four-storey brownstone rooming-house on the upper West Side between Columbus Avenue and Central Park West, peopled (among others) by an eyebrow-plucking, kimono-wearing “queen” and a rather repulsive, dipsomaniacal landlady. And her dog.

Hunn, Olsen and their director Samuel Phillips have chosen not to attempt New York accents but play it in their own natural voices while retaining the original location. This happily draws the focus to their inner feelings and motivations, as Jerry spins his bizarre yet credible yarns and Peter tries to get his measure.

Quite why Peter fiddles with a fake cigarette rather than the pipe Albee specifies is a mystery to me, as is Jerry’s aimless wandering downstage of Peter when there would be far more menace in his being upstage, just out of Peter’s peripheral vision. ‘Direct address’ is not an appropriate convention here, as the dynamics of a stranger invading someone’s personal space and behaving ‘abnormally’ according to social conventions needs to be a key driver in the staging.

These quibbles aside, the part of the play we see is clearly articulated and engagingly presented, compelling interest in – and empathy for – both characters. Does Jerry simply need to have a ‘normal’ conversation with someone ‘normal’? Does he perhaps envy, and even aspire to, Peter’s lifestyle? (Faux spoiler alert, given we don’t see the second half: The question raised by the end of the play is, has he been suicidal from the start and has he premeditated the role suddenly and shockingly thrust on Peter, or is it simply their very different experiences of ‘home’ which sparks the impulsive outcome?)

Samuel Beckett’s playlet Ohio Impromptu (1980) – so named because he wrote it to be performed at an academic symposium in Ohio to honour his 75th birthday – deals with grief and coping with what’s left for the remaining loved one before their inevitable death.

An old man reads the last few pages of a book to his own likeness, head bowed and faceless: “Nothing is left to tell …” The words explore the author’s quest for “relief” in the wake of a loss and reveal how a complete change of scene was not the answer, whereas remaining with the familiar and ‘normal’ may have been.  

While in Krapp’s Last Tape (1958) Beckett has Krapp looking back at his life via a reel-to-reel tape recorder, and rewinding to replay his favourite bits, here the Listener (James Cain) raps on the table at which both men are seated, first to have the last phrase repeated, then to have the Reader (Patrick Carroll) resume the story.

As it plays out, the minimalist action before us and the narrative being read blend into one; likewise the Reader and the Listener also become one … Or were they always? “Nothing is left to tell.”

Director Jonathan Price lets the piece play out without rush or fuss which is just as it should be. His choice of the much older Beckett sketch Rough for Theatre 1 (late 1950s) as a companion piece is interesting for the contrasts it offers, from order to chaos and for the two male actors.

The swift ripping apart of the table and the strewing about of detritus to create the dystopian setting for Rough for Theatre 1 (set designed by Debbie Fish and lit by Rowan McShane) is a scene it itself, completed as Carroll transitions into his next role: A – a blind fiddle-scraping beggar.

Cain plays B, an irascible ‘cripple’, wheelchair-bound and brandishing a stick which – along with the power of sight – gives him the upper hand. Resonances with Waiting for Godot (1953) and Endgame (1957) abound. Beckett is on record as saying Hamm and Clov are Vladimir and Estragon (Didi and Gogo) in later life, and for me, especially given the twist at the end, this play feels like a variation on the Pozzo / Lucky relationship.

Price, Carroll and Cain have fashioned a compelling sketch here that keeps seeming to promise a breakout into comedy but remains overshadowed by Beckett’s dismal perception of the human condition. As it should.

Bronwyn Cheyne is the third director to showcase her skills in this second season of Merely to be Normal and the only one of the six over all to choose a New Zealand work. Thus she is the one who has not taken the ‘merely normal’ path, although I do feel it should be the norm rather than the exception with budding directors whose mission is to locate their authentic creative ‘voice’.  

Originally written as a Young & Hungry commission (1995), Fold is a satire of white middle-class ‘yuppie’ value systems. Karen (Kashmir Postel), Eileen (Jess Old), Pascall (Jake Brown), Roger (Nick Andrews) and John (Bruce Colban) routinely gather to celebrate each other’s birthdays with gift-giving, witty banter and subtly malevolent status games.

Identically dressed in backless hospital gowns, between scenes they flock to a washing line upstage, remove their white undies, peg them up and don clean ones. It’s a wonderfully absurdist device that says more than words could do.

Within the formal, ritualised social and dramatic structure, individual personalities slowly emerge while their collective wilful ignorance and arrogance exposes the anatomy of those who are sociopathic by default.

Individually and together the cast conveys the satire with conviction – abetted, as the world is heard crumbling around them, by Rowan McShane’s disturbing sound design.

The seasons have shown there is some good new directing talent coming through. The real test, however, and what the profession needs most, is for directors to take new plays from the page to the stage for the very first time. This is what separates the truly creative from the ‘merely recreative’ directors. I look forward to seeing who might step up to that challenging mark.

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