Footfalls and Play
Jack Studio Theatre
Reviewed – 28th February 2019
β β β β β
“Beckett pares his later works to the extreme, wasting no words and here we are compelled to hang on to his every one”
Samuel Beckett is often misconstrued as writing inaccessible, absurd theatre with unconventional structures, intangible plots and bleak, sordid characters. Contrary to this, his ability to discard the trappings and complications which make up much of our literature and lay bare the most essential aspects of the human condition is both comic and cathartic. Angel Theatre Company offers two of his short, later plays, βFootfallsβ and βPlayβ, both of which are perfect examples of Beckettβs most musical orchestration of scripts, full of technical precision and producing dramatic aural imagery.
In βPlayβ the scene is set to a background of chattering. Three large urns hold the visible heads of Man, Woman 1 (his wife) and Woman 2 (his mistress); the agelessness, indicated by Beckett, suggest souls in purgatory. Written separately and later interspersed, the three tell their story in short, often fragmented sentences and pauses at a rapid speed while lit by a spotlight which moves directly from one to another. Stage directions specify tempo, tone and volume, even a βda capoβ and brief coda. Sometimes appearing as victims of the light, each reacts differently to the sense of interrogation. Rose Trustman as Woman 1, shows the strong, fighting spirit of the wife but doesnβt know how to satisfy the light, telling it to βget off herβ. Samantha Kamras portrays Woman 2 with a calm confidence, increasingly losing her poise when the light is on her and asking if she is not becoming βunhingedβ. Ricky Zalman neatly defines the witty quality of Manβs wandering imagination as he speaks. Although the initial soundtrack and face makeup is significantly similar to Minghellaβs 2001 film, John Patterson directs with immaculate precision and we are immediately caught up in the intrigue of this love triangle, devoid of stereotypical melodrama and romanticised fiction.
The muted yet detailed noises in βFootfallsβ β the bell punctuating the four parts, the pacing of May and the sound of speech β paint a softly poignant and personal picture but the play also brushes the wider question of existence. May, dressed in a dishevelled nightdress, is trapped in a moment in time, which she replays repeatedly as she paces slowly up and down, endlessly revolving something in her mind. She converses with her mother, normally an off-stage voice but in this case played by Pearl Marsland as a haunting, maternal face in the doorway, watching her daughter. In a deeply moving performance from Anna Bonnett, we feel Mayβs isolation and suffering in her tormented thoughts, her mind gradually fading with her presence on stage. In the two plays, Oliver Fretzβs lighting is impeccable in mood and movement.
The company conveys a rapport which absorbs us into the worlds of these relationships, linked by their raw nature but different in mood and manner. Beckett pares his later works to the extreme, wasting no words and here we are compelled to hang on to his every one.
Reviewed by Joanna Hetherington
Photography by Angel Theatre Company
Footfalls and Play
Jack Studio Theatre until 9th March
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Back to Where | β β β β | July 2018
The White Rose | β β β β | July 2018
Hobson’s Choice | β β β β | September 2018
Dracula | β β β Β½ | October 2018
Radiant Vermin | β β β β | November 2018
Sweet Like Chocolate Boy | β β β β β | November 2018
Cinderella | β β β | December 2018
Gentleman Jack | β β β β | January 2019
Taro | β β β Β½ | January 2019
As A Man Grows Younger | β β β | February 2019
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