Tag Archives: Imogen Stirling Poetry

Hypocrisy
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Theatre503

#Hypocrisy

#Hypocrisy

Theatre503

Reviewed โ€“ 26th November 2018

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…ยฝ

โ€œStirlingโ€™s script though is highly nuanced, her phrasing delicate yet powerfulโ€

 

When entering the performance space of Theatre503 for Imogen Stirling and Ross Somervilleโ€™s spoken word meets folk score piece #Hypocrisy, weโ€™re met with the apparatus of an unplugged concert: a small acoustic amp and guitar, two hard cases, a black wineglass, and a Macbook all fall among other miscellaneous items. Two placards stand out however, one reading โ€˜Wonderful Exileโ€™, and another โ€˜Not Entirely Trueโ€™. These serve as both physical and literal signposts for Stirlingโ€™s narrative; her personaโ€™s fifty minute soliloquy begins by eulogistically remembering a European busking tour, and then, punctuated by flashes of introspection concerning white privilege, difference, and othering, returns to Glasgow before moving into a more meandering interrogation of justice, compassion, terror, and othering.

It becomes obvious from the outset that the piece is at risk of becoming a parody of itself if we associate Stirling too closely with her presented character. With a white cast playing to a predominantly white audience, the danger that the piece could stray into self-congratulatory virtue signalling is a real one, regardless of whether the piece is autobiographically influenced. Stirlingโ€™s script though is highly nuanced, her phrasing delicate yet powerful. She speaks of the โ€˜bandwagon of subjective compassionโ€™ with regards to Western responses to terror attacks, and ends with the recommendation that we โ€˜reject the fallacy and retain perspectiveโ€™.

On the adjacent acoustic guitar, Somervilleโ€™s mixture of folky finger picking and increasing intense strumming constantly bubbles below the poetry, with major sevenths adding a calming presence and seemingly dictating Stirlingโ€™s oral speed. Having him hold up placards and exchange doubtful frowns with Stirling though feels like a slightly confused directive โ€” once this choice is taken for Somerville to be this active alongside the narration, then why not go further? As it stands, he feels a little caught between roles. Stirlingโ€™s script is much more powerful when confronting the audience rather than facing Somerville and using him as a partial reference point.

The script is strongest in its more philosophical ruminations rather than the confessional opening. Although recounting experiences throughout Europe is a necessary precursor to Stirlingโ€™s more revelatory and introspective latter sections, it does at times feel laboured, as if recognising the ignorance displayed while abroad couldโ€™ve been tackled without having to flesh out individual scenarios. When we move into sections discussing who has the privilege to call themselves different rather than other, we quickly locate Stirlingโ€™s strength as both a writer and performer. Her voice suits the rise and fall of the words, and she maintains a humour and musicality which gives bounce to what is a cutting social commentary: โ€˜Different loves to be lovedโ€™, she concludes.

#Hypocrisy does provoke the thoughts its supposed to, even if the route towards them could be a little clearer. The focus on social media is smart and relevant, and Somervilleโ€™s score is excellent in its own right. Polishing the opening sections would allow for further contemplation later on; one senses that if Stirling had the opportunity to delve further into post-colonial discourses โ€” to discuss why the West has the attitudes it does โ€” then the obvious incision of her writing would yield even more impactful results

 

Reviewed by Ravi Ghosh

Photography by Eleonora Collini

 


#Hypocrisy

Theatre503

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Her Not Him | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | January 2018
Brโ€™er Cotton | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | March 2018
Reared | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | April 2018
Isaac Came Home From the Mountain | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | May 2018
Caterpillar | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | September 2018
The Art of Gaman | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | October 2018

 

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