Tag Archives: Jonny Hardie

THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS

★★★

Finbourough Theatre

THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS at the Finborough Theatre

★★★

“Zajac’s performance is subtle and intense. Emotions flicker beautifully across his face”

The Tailor of Inverness tells the story of Mateusz Zajac (father of writer/performer Matthew Zajac) a Polish born tailor, who settled in Inverness after the Second World War.

The difficulty is that the story is simply presented as The Tailor telling us about his life. There is no mystery or dramatic question. A buried truth does come to light, and with it questions around the honesty of our narrator, but this happens so late in the play that it’s hard to care.

His life story is interesting, as with many of the stories of displaced Europeans in the 20th century. However, the structure is aimless and the details dense and lengthy.

That said, Zajac’s performance is subtle and intense. Emotions flicker beautifully across his face. He brings his father to life with a quiet complexity of accent and physicality. His accent – a Scottish-Polish hybrid – is maintained impeccably throughout, and a real sense of the man is evoked.

 

 

Ben Harrison’s direction is varied, working with the story to create light and shade. The storytelling style is broken with dramatic sketches of the past, and with song and poetry. Some of this is recorded with Magdalena Kaleta reciting in Polish. Harrison’s choices, along with sound design by Timothy Brinkhurst, work with the narration to create a strong picture of this man’s world. The piece is accompanied throughout by Jonny Hardy (in some performances it’s Amy Geddes) on the violin, bringing a haunting melancholy to the stage.

Much of the script is in Polish, and a little Russian, with subtitles projected onto the backdrop. The use of AV throughout is carefully and well crafted. A map accompanies the description of Zajac’s time serving during the war, flagging key cities and tracing the route. Photographs of the family are projected and flashes of memory are echoed with images. This works well with Kai Fischer’s subtly shifting lighting.

Ali Maclaurin’s set sees flattened and plastered clothing pasted against the backdrop, nodding to Zajac’s profession, while evoking the horrors of mass slaughter which he remembers. It’s a thoughtful and well executed idea.

While Zajac’s story is interesting, it felt too long a piece to coast on that. I was more interested in his time in Scotland, and the experiences of Matthew Zajac himself returning to Poland to uncover the truth of his father’s past (this made up the final third of the play) than the details of his father’s time in the war, during which I got a little lost.

 


THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS at the Finborough Theatre

Reviewed on 17th May 2024

by Auriol Reddaway

Photography by Tim Morozzo

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

BANGING DENMARK | ★★★ | April 2024
FOAM | ★★★★ | April 2024
JAB | ★★★★ | February 2024
THE WIND AND THE RAIN | ★★★ | July 2023
SALT-WATER MOON | ★★★★ | January 2023
PENNYROYAL | ★★★★ | July 2022
THE STRAW CHAIR | ★★★ | April 2022
THE SUGAR HOUSE | ★★★★ | November 2021

THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS

THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS

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Nightlands

Nightlands

★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

NIGHTLANDS at Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★

Nightlands

 

“Nightlands is the kind of play you root for, even when it doesn’t quite succeed”

 

Jack MacGregor’s play Nightlands is an ambitious drama set in 1999, in Svalbard, the land of polar bears—and very few humans. Nightlands switches from the personal to the political and back again in ways that you don’t anticipate. It’s also performed by just two actors, the very talented veteran Matthew Zajac, and an equally talented newcomer, Rebecca Wilkie. But in sixty minutes, there just isn’t enough time to explore all the subjects MacGregor puts on stage for his characters to tackle. Especially when these characters — a tough, no-nonsense young woman named Slava and the morose, antisocial, much older Sasha — have brought more than enough of their own baggage up to the Arctic Circle. But Nightlands is proof enough that the Scottish Highlands company Dogstar, based in the Inverness area, doesn’t shy away from plays that deal with difficult material. MacGregor does provide a programme note about themes in this play. It’s helpful, however, if audiences have some knowledge of where the world has been drifting since 1999, when Vladimir Putin came to power in the former Soviet Union. There are scattered references here and there in Nightlands, but they are not really sufficient to get a firm footing on this complex subject matter.

Nightlands opens with two performers telling a story. They constantly interrupt each other, as they set the scene, and fill in the details. She is playing the character of Slava from Chelubinsk. Slava has been assigned to work, alone, in one of the most remote spots in the world. To ensure that Svalbard remains part of a demilitarized zone. The performer who plays Sasha, a character who speaks five languages, is writing a memoir, and is from somewhere south of Moscow — shouldn’t even be there. Yet somehow, he is. This switching back and forth is playwright MacGregor’s way of showing how we rely on memory to establish character and place. And Slava and Sasha also dance around the subject of memory—sometimes literally—as they try to establish physical territory in their isolated location. Both have reasons for wanting to live alone. Both are running from past lives in the former Soviet Union. Neither wants the other to be there, but outside is only the Arctic wasteland, populated by polar bears. The drama is slow moving, and the facts that emerge are ambiguous. It takes a while to see where Nightlands might be going. Other than the bears, the threat to the characters is underplayed, for all the remoteness of their situation.

Nevertheless, MacGregor has created something rather unusual. In Nightlands, he avoids the usual pitfalls of “relationship” dramas by establishing that Slava and Sasha are not going to be romantically involved. At least one character is an unreliable narrator, and there are hints that unreliable memories are at play here as well. Intriguing stuff. But ultimately, it doesn’t add up to a fully satisfying evening, despite the performance skills of Wilkie and Sajac. It may be that sixty minutes is simply not enough time to get to grips with the story. Or that two characters trapped in a room together, can only conjure a limited picture of a decaying Communist state, and the dangerous politics developing thousands of miles away. It’s a brave attempt by MacGregor to write a “big” play (he directs as well), but Nightlands is a bit short of resources. Rather like its two characters in Svalbard.

Nightlands is the kind of play you root for, even when it doesn’t quite succeed. And it’s good to see a theatre company like Dogstar, encouraging playwrights to take a chance on telling a different kind of story for the stage.

 

Reviewed 6th August 2022

by Dominica Plummer

 

Photography by Paul Campbell

 

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