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THE LESSON

★★★★

The Hope Theatre

THE LESSON at The Hope Theatre

★★★★

Lesson

“The dialogue, in the hands of the accomplished trio of actors, is music (sometimes thrillingly discordant) to the ears throughout”

 

Written in 1950, Eugene Ionesco’s “The Lesson” has lost none of its strangeness, nor its resonance. It exemplifies what has been coined ‘Theatre of the absurd’ of which Ionesco is master. A powerful three hander it beats to the palpitating rhythm of a macabre merry-go-round upon which the archetypal characters of the Professor, the Pupil and the Maid are fated to ride.

The Maid is busy mopping the floor of the Professor’s study as the audience take their seats. A seemingly innocuous pre-show. For those familiar with the play, I don’t need to state its significance; and for those unfamiliar, I won’t. So let the lesson begin. The Maid fussily withdraws having ushered in the new Pupil. It gets off to a smooth start but it’s not long before the Professor becomes increasingly frustrated with his protégé’s inability to grasp the rudiments of mathematics. Roger Alborough wastes no time establishing his stage presence with a performance that is chillingly playful. But playful in the way a predator teases with its prey.

Sheetal Kapoor is quite extraordinary as the Pupil, transforming from compliant, naïve schoolgirl into a shattered marionette. As her enthusiasm for the lesson deteriorates her toothache increases; clearly a metaphor for her psychological pain. In fact, the whole play is a metaphor, a cautionary tale for today, further exemplified by Joan Potter’s Maid who repeatedly has to clean up the mess. Potter makes the sinister aspects of this play quite palpable with an understated performance pitched with just the right amount of irony. Yes, it’s gruesome but, hey, it’s absurd so it’s okay to laugh.

Donald Watson’s translation is further heightened under Matthew Parker’s slick direction. The dialogue, in the hands of the accomplished trio of actors, is music (sometimes thrillingly discordant) to the ears throughout. Repeated banalities, unshackled illogicality and non sequiturs all compete for air time. Comedy and violence, absurdity and disturbance, mystery and fear all go hand in hand; so the audience’s reactions are varied. While some are laughing, others are recoiling in horror.

The experience is sharpened by the confines of the space. Encased in the round, neither the actors nor the audience have room to escape, and there’s even less room for a fourth wall. Although the cast never address the audience directly we are drawn into the impossible dialogue: there is no barrier between us and them, between reality and fantasy, which intensifies the unnerving quality of the writing. Simon Arrowsmith’s filmic sound design adds the final layer; a gossamer cloak of atmosphere that fits the action perfectly.

Gripping through to the final scene in which the absurdity pours over the action like blood from a knife wound, “The Lesson” has something to teach us all. And this production at the Hope Theatre is, without a doubt, a high-grade lesson in theatre making.

 

Reviewed by Jonathan Evans

Reviewed – 27th September 2018

Photography by LH Photography

 


The Lesson

Hope Theatre until 13th October

 

Previously reviewed at The Hope:
My Gay Best Friend | ★★★★★ | January 2018
Foul Pages | ★★★ | February 2018
Moments / Empty Beds | ★★★★ | February 2018
My Evolution of the Cave Painting | ★★★★ | February 2018
Our Big Love Story | ★★ | March 2018
Cream Tea & Incest | ★★★★ | April 2018
Adam & Eve | ★★★★ | May 2018
Worth a Flutter | ★★ | May 2018
Cockamamy | ★★★★ | June 2018
Fat Jewels | ★★★★★ | July 2018
Medicine | ★★★ | August 2018
The Dog / The Cat | ★★★★★ | September 2018

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com

 

 

THE DOG / THE CAT

★★★★★

The Hope Theatre

THE DOG / THE CAT at The Hope Theatre

★★★★★

Cat

“two delightful romantic comedies with memorable characters we’d gladly see more of”

 

Where would we be without our pets?

This is the question posed by ‘The Dog/The Cat’, a charming and laugh-out-loud funny double-bill by multi-talented Australian playwrights Brendan Cowell and Lally Katz. Existing in the same surreal yet recognisable urban world, these short romantic-comedy pieces are refreshingly different in tone and style, working in harmony to produce a wonderfully bizarre evening of escapism and hilarity.

Although the weaker of the two plays, the evening kicks off with Cowell’s ‘The Dog’. Each scene takes place around a park bench as we follow the story of divorcee Ben (Thomas Blackburne), his roommate Marcus (Frederick Di Rosa) and university lecturer Miracle (Gemma Harvey) negotiating a tricky love triangle centred around a shared emotional dependency on dogs. ‘The Cat’ enters a more sedate yet surreal world where recently separated couple Albert and Alex, whose indecision about procreation led to the co-ownership of a cat, try to embrace new lives as single-and-misbehaving twenty-somethings. The titular cat, expertly played by Blackburne, glides elegantly from point of contention to burden to bringer of peace, disturbing new relationships whilst cunningly strengthening old ones.

Seen together, we experience two delightful romantic comedies with memorable characters we’d gladly see more of. ‘The Dog’ presents the awkwardness and egotism often found when people meet for the first time all-too realistically. Katz’ short play is an actor’s dream; it bubbles with outrageous characters representing the silly lures of urban life, whilst maintaining a core of emotional truth. Di Rosa, Blackburne and Harvey all work together beautifully, giving physically precise and hilarious performances. Blackburne, a veteran of Australian television and film, gives an uncannily good performance as ‘Cat’, and his expressive face working with well-timed lighting changes left the audience roaring with laughter. Both playwrights are well-known in Australia and these pieces in their own right well-deserve being transferred to a bigger space.

Sharon Burrell’s direction could have been a little kinder to the audience, but the simplicity of the design is maintained throughout and allows the focus to remain on character dynamics and relationships. We see the brutal honesty of male friendship and the brutal power of fate (or at least, fate as dictated by a cat). The pretensions of urban life are ridiculed for all they’re worth – “Crossfit is a cult” – and the jokes (for the audiences’ enjoyment at least) come thick and fast.

As a combined force, these two plays are bursting with odd and original ideas and offer a near-perfect start to a great night out.

 

Reviewed by Joseph Prestwich

Reviewed – 6th September 2018

Photography by Joe Twigg

 


The Dog / The Cat

Hope Theatre until 22nd September

 

 

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