Alcatraz
The Vaults
Reviewed – 2nd March 2019
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“AΒ relevant, well-acted play with brilliant story concept. If Wood can work out the kinks in the script, Alcatraz could be a powerful show”
On Christmas Eve, 11-year-old Sandy embarks on a rescue mission: sheβs going to break her granny out of the care home where theyβve locked her up. Sandyβs seen Escape from Alcatraz enough times β if Clint Eastwood can do it, so can she. The exasperated head nurse and a well-meaning new staff member are just two of the many obstacles between Sandy, her gran, and freedom.
Alcatraz, written by Nathan Lucky Wood and directed by Emily Collins, questions the state of elderly care in modern society. Itβs an excellent premise for a vital topic. A child equating her grandmotherβs care home with Alcatraz, and carrying out a plan to rescue her, is a scintillating approach to the social commentary. Itβs a promising concept that hasnβt quite reached its potential.
The beginning of the play is confusing. Sandy (Katherine Carlton) monologues about papier-mΓ’chΓ©, and narrates her journey breaking into βAlcatrazβ while reciting the plot of Escape from Alcatraz. These sections feel as long as it inevitably does when an overeager person is describing their favourite film. Itβs difficult to care, and Wood hasnβt given us a reason to. Unless youβve read the programme (which the script should not require), itβs unclear what Sandyβs doing or where she is. The disorientation creates a sense of detachment: if we donβt know her mission, we cannot be invested in whether sheβll achieve it. Additionally, a child breaking into a prison (or care home) has little stakes. What will happen if sheβs caught? A reprimand and a call home. The scenario doesnβt inspire the sort of apprehension necessary to hold interest without any context to support it.
The story picks up when Sandy reaches her gran, and they make their escape. Thereβs good interaction between the characters and solid acting all around. The adult Carlton is impressively convincing as an 11-year-old. Josh AsarΓ© is charming as flustered trainee-carer Peter. Ellie Dickens brings adept lightness to Donna, Sandyβs grandmother who is suffering from dementia. Although described as βnot niceβ, Lainy Boyle brings humanity to burned-out head nurse Arden.
The script continues to hit snags. The faltering pace makes the play feel far longer than its 60-minute runtime. An abundance of opportunities for humour arenβt fully capitalised on. Thereβs an attempt to pack what could be a second full-length play into the final ten minutes: Sandyβs father (Alec Nicholls) is introduced, along with a barrage of information about his relationship with Sandy and Donna, and Sandyβs absent mother. The scene quickly escalates to melodrama that isnβt necessarily earned, considering weβre just meeting the father. We donβt have the connection to him we need to feel his devastation as he confronts his failings. This is an intriguing, complicated family. Itβs a shame the play only scratches their surface at the very end.
Alcatraz is a relevant, well-acted play with brilliant story concept. If Wood can work out the kinks in the script, Alcatraz could be a powerful show.
Reviewed by Addison Waite
Alcatraz
Part of VAULT Festival 2019
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