MERELY TO BE NORMAL… Season One
Studio 77, Victoria University, 77 Fairlie Tce, Kelburn, Wellington
17/07/2013 - 20/07/2013
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 ONE
The evening opens with a work by one of England’s greatest living dramatists, Edward Bond. Andrew Clarke will direct Existence, a power struggle between two characters and an exploration of what happens when an over-articulate force hits an uncommunicative barrier. Expect themes and ideas to stay with you long after you leave the theatre.
Raicheal Doohan directs the sad and beautiful Komachi by Romulus Linney, based on a Japanese myth about Ono no Komachi and her lover. Featuring a design by a Wellington architecture student and choreography inspired by traditional Japanese noh theatre, Beijing opera and contemporary dance, Komachi promises to be visually thrilling.
Season one finishes with an excerpt from The Lost Babylon by Takeshi Kawamura, directed by Fern Wallingford. Promising to make you think twice about the screens, wires and blinking lights that surround us every day, Kawamura’s play takes us inside a sinister amusement park as a screenwriter and action movie director enter to create a commercial for the park.
Production Details:
Studio 77 – 77 Fairlie Terrace, Kelburn, Wellington
Season 1: 17th-20th July 7-9pm
Tickets: $15 Waged, $8 Concession
Bookings: theatre@vuw.ac.nz or 04 463 5359
THEA406 Merely to be Normal Season 1 Credits
Komachi by Romulus Linney
Directed by Raicheal Doohan
Cast:
Komachi (dancer) Lydia Buckely
Komachi (voice) Maggie White
Shosho Jack Blomfield
Crew:
Costumier Rosie Alldridge
Lighting Design Tania Ngata
Technical Operation Tony Black
Mask Design Teressa Cho
Set Design + Build Belle Fraser and Raicheal Doohan
Stage Manager Penny Lawrence
Sound Design Fern Wallingford and Raicheal Doohan
Thanks: Alex Allan, Daniel Doohan, Fabricio Chicca, Zoe Redwood, Polly Dawes and Andy Neal.
Komachi is produced by arrangement with Hal Leonard Australian Pty Ltd, On behalf of Dramatists Play Service, Inc.
Existence by Edward Bond
Directed by Andrew Clarke
Cast:
Phillipa Drakeford
Michael Hebenton
Crew:
Assistant Director Kate Hounsell
Sound Design Amy Griffin-Browne
Lighting Design and Tony Black
Technical Operation
The Lost Babylon by Takeshi Kawamura
Directed by Fern Wallingford
Cast:
Woman/Girl Emma Rose Luxton
Man Michael Pocock
Soldier/Boss Tom KEreama
Crew:
Set Design Emma Robinson
Lighting Design Nick Zwart
Technical Operation Tony Black
Sound and Projection Design Fern Wallingford
Thanks: Mitch Harty
A fools’ errand or a survival necessity?
Review by John Smythe 18th Jul 2013
The collective title for these two seasons of three short pieces comes from Albert Camus: “Nobody realises that some people expend tremendous energy merely to be normal.” The first season’s trio do not immediately present themselves as linked to that quest but I guess some concept of ‘normal’ human behaviour is always an implicit benchmark for stories about humanity’s achievements and failures.
Legendary (9th century) Japanese poet Ono no Komachi has been immortalised in five Noh plays which, according to Wiki, “tend to focus on her talent for waka [a verse form] and her love affairs and the vanity of a life spent indulging in romantic liaisons.” Legend has it she ended her life as a destitute wandering hag but of course many mythmakers have remoulded her story over the centuries to illustrate either eternal truths or value systems others may find questionable.
Recently deceased American playwright Romulus Linney (father of the better-known Laura) included his take on Komachi in his play Three Poets and director Raicheal Doohan has mounted an exquisite rendition in the Noh tradition.
Doohan has also co-designed, with Belle Fraser, a splendid stylised set using paper, wire and silk to depict a tree in blossom, a river and rocks. And with Fern Wallingford she has created a haunting sound design. Rosie Aldridge’s costume and make-up designs and Tania Ngata’s lighting design complete the strikingly realised visual aspects.
“Only the poet who writes about love when young can write about love when old,” Komachi tells the besotted yet aggressively big-noting Prince Shosho. “It takes one to understand the other.” She puts him to the test with a poetry duel and a challenge to cross the river – and being a tale of indulgent pride and passion, of course it all ends badly, but in a good way theatrically.
Maggie White voices the poetic lines beautifully while objectifying her Komachi self in a masked persona danced by Lydia Buckley. Jack Blomfield is a majestic Shosho. Despite being just 15 minutes long, memories of this work haunt me still.
As you’d expect from Edward Bond, Existence is dark, self-destructive and despairing, with darkness being the over-riding principle of Andrew Clarke’s directing and Tony Black’s lighting design. It should ramp up the tension and fear factor but somehow it becomes more frustrating than anything else.
First produced as a radio play in 2002 then later that year on stage, it pits a drunk who has lost his way, in every sense, against a passive victim who has no voice and seems to expect his destiny. I assume it’s allegorical but can’t quite decode it from this production. For a while I thought its purpose could be to affirm the power passive resistance to either appease and aggressor or make them self-destruct. But no, the outcome precludes that.
Written for two males, it is played here by Phillipa Drakeford and Michael Hebenton who, the programme tells us, will alternate the roles each night. The selection on this opening night, however, seems to be decided by a bout of ‘paper-scissors-rock’. Thus Drakeford gets to be the incumbent and Hebenton the intruder.
Stage violence is a strange beast when used in a serious drama. In the very act of being convincing it makes us worry about actor safety which detracts from our willing suspension of disbelief. I sincerely hope these two are well trained to ensure the ‘victim’ is always in control of the ‘violence’, especially where the head and neck are involved. My doubts are raised by the fact that he really does shout into her ear at point blank range, twice, which to my mind is an assault on a real human faculty that could cause lasting damage. At the very least it distracts me from engaging in the ‘make believe’.
While Hebenton gives a good account of the agitated menace who has no direction, dissipates his energy and is self-defeating, his articulation is such that if there is anything of value to be gleaned from his verbal blatherings, beyond the language of abuse and self-loathing, it passes me by.
Drakeford’s disempowerment, silence and stillness are finally more dramatic, especially when ‘the power’ is suddenly in her hands (I won’t reveal how or why).
Existence is a play I want to get more from, in terms of what it is really about, but I don’t. It just makes me feel grumpy.
Our ability to distinguish fantasy from reality is, of course, fundamental to the way we engage with all entertainment forms. But Japanese playwright Takeshi Kawamura plays with exactly that with The Lost Babylon (which premiered in 1999). He satirises both popular culture and contemporary society’s value systems – although in this case, what I take to be Act I of a longer play focuses more on the former.
As one who is heartily sick of the obscene killing fests that festoon so many feature films and TV series in the name of entertainment, not least because technology now allows the illusions to look more and more real, I readily warm to the critique embedded in Kawamura’s play.
A Boss (Tom Kereama), seen only on screen in silhouette, has brought in a Screenwriter (Emma Rose Luxton), and now a Soldier (Kereama) leads in a blindfolded Director (Michael Pocock), to work on a new amusement park: The Lost Babylon.
Director Fern Wallingford – who also delivers an effective sound and projection design – locates it in our world too by having her actors use their natural voices. This is, after all, a universal issue; we too are both vulnerable and culpable.
Luxton is especially impressive in capturing the Screenwriter’s dilemma as she seeks a way (or does she?) of rising above the moral vacuum she has been sucked into. Her subtle segues between scripted dialogue and her real voice, role-playing and authentic behaviour, maintain our interest and keep us alert as we try to decode the action we witness.
Pocock’s Director has no such qualms, bringing boyish delight to the ‘game’, until events make him confront and question his ‘reality’ too. And Kereama brings a truth to his roles that ensures we believe in the situation.
Emma Robinson’s set design, lit by Nick Zwart, has a nice ambiguity. The premise tells us these walls are under construction yet they evoke disintegration … of what? That’s for us to work out.
Constrained as they are by having to mount three very different works in the same space with just a 10-minute turnaround, these director-designer teams have risen to the challenge with alacrity, and they are very well served by the actors and technical crews.
Coming back to the question of where the collective title fits in, I guess each play presents a view of humanity and society in a way that challenges our ability to lead ‘normal’ lives. Camus may have thought that expending great energy “merely to be normal” was a fool’s errand, but these plays suggest our survival may depend upon it.
Copyright © in the review belongs to the reviewer
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