Tag Archives: Miriam Sallon

Fit for Work

★★

Chapel Playhouse

Fit for Work

Chapel Playhouse

Reviewed – 24th August 2019

★★

 

“whilst one can’t really ask for enjoyment from a story like this, there does need to be a glimmer of hope, or at least a moment’s hiatus from desolation”

 

Five months ago, Terry Lawson (Jasey Ó Dálaigh) suffered a stroke, and since then his health has continued to deteriorate. Mrs Smith (Ciara Pouncett), a healthcare professional, is tasked with deciding if Terry is eligible for ESA (Employment and Support Allowance) or whether he is in fact capable of working.

The hour-long show consists of an interrogation regarding Terry’s physical and mental health. At first we’re uncertain if Mrs Smith is a sympathetic ear, but as the play goes on she grows steadily more passive aggressive, barely bothering to disguise her eye rolls as Terry explains his inability to walk more than 100 metres, and his growing depression and anxiety.

The consequences of continued austerity are of course an incredibly important issue, and writer and director Louise Powell’s ‘Fit For Work’ certainly rings true in the manner in which Terry is treated as suspect from the get-go; being asked completely inappropriate questions about his failed suicide attempt (a tactic that was reported in 2017), and made to present and detail his illness time and again.

But to have an onslaught of misery and misfortune for a full hour is a lot. There is literally no relief; no small joke, or moment of remembered kindness or love. We don’t even really get to know Terry besides his ailments. The entire content of the show is watching utter despair consistently being met with deep cynicism. There’s no real plot, just a chipping away at what is already a very small reserve of hope.

Whilst it might be an accurate rendering, and both Dálaigh and Pouncett fulfil their roles effectively, much as someone yelling for an hour loses their potency, having someone being completely miserable or completely passive aggressive for so long wears away its effectiveness.

The staging is an appropriately simple doctor’s office, with a couple of family photos and a framed child’s drawing atop the desk to remind us that even though Mrs Smith seems completely heartless, she is a human being who thinks of herself as a good person, which makes her behaviour all the more concerning.

There are a couple of sound cues meant to convey (I think) what Mrs Smith is typing in her notes: the first happens so quickly I’m uncertain exactly what was said. The second is cut short. And after both cues the sound system is left on for a good while, hissing white noise. I don’t feel anything was lost by my not hearing these so perhaps the show could do without.

Both the situation and dialogue of ‘Fit For Work’ are believable enough, but whilst one can’t really ask for enjoyment from a story like this, there does need to be a glimmer of hope, or at least a moment’s hiatus from desolation, just to give the audience a short respite, even if it’s immediately followed by an even darker reality.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

Image courtesy Wellcome Collection

 

 


Camden Fringe

Fit for Work

Chapel Playhouse until 25th August as part of Camden Fringe 2019

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Blood Tales | ★★½ | March 2019
Connecting | ★★★★ | March 2019
Freak | ★★ | March 2019
The Passion Of The Playboy Riots | ★★★★ | July 2019

 

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The Net

★★½

Tristan Bates Theatre

The Net

The Net

Tristan Bates Theatre

Reviewed – 16th August 2019

★★½

 

No doubt, this is still a very relevant and prevalent story. But the manner in which it has been tackled seems a bit reductive …

 

This is the age-old story of ‘us versus them’. Directed by Samara Gannon, The Net is set on an unnamed contested piece of land divided by a wall, a pair of women on each side laying their claim. The land is barren, but still the fight goes on. One side says they “feel” that this is their land, that it’s time they took what was rightfully theirs; the other argues that their villages were razed to the ground, that this was, until recently, their home.

No doubt, this is still a very relevant and prevalent story. But the manner in which it has been tackled seems a bit reductive, having two sides of the argument come so plainly to the table, and ending up almost exactly where you would expect, with everyone having some kind of revelation about their enemies, notwithstanding a little bloodshed along the way. Granted, The Net takes a slight curve in the normal plot trajectory, but it’s not shocking enough that we don’t see what’s round the bend.

The staging (Sally Sommerville-Woodiwis) is quite beautiful: a patchwork of mismatching fishing nets, intertwined with trinkets and what look like either crystal balls or Christmas baubles, make up the dividing wall. This serves both to explain how one might conceivably break through, and to allow the audience to see both sides. The fact of it being made by something so easily broken isn’t really addressed, but it’s much of a muchness – the wall is there, people are afraid to break through, other people are afraid that they might.

There are abundant sound effects (Ruth Sullivan), denoting the closing in of the unseen army, or splices between the present moment and individual monologues, but very often it’s unclear what these sounds are supposed to be. Coursing electricity is used, for example, to bring us back to the conflict at hand, with no correlation to the plot. The sound of body-slaps (I think?) and whispers is used as an undercurrent for a couple of monologues, but again, I don’t understand their relevance.

The production extols its inclusion of all ages in the telling of this story, “from 16 to 70”. Sue Moore, playing da Silva’s grandmother, is a wonderful addition in theory. Unfortunately, her range is limited from mild annoyance all the way to mild frustration. She does push herself in one emotionally vexing monologue recounting her daughter’s death, but the moment is short-lived.

Melaina Pecorini, at the other end of the age range (I’m presuming she’s sixteen), expresses her character’s ongoing trauma and naivety faithfully. Yvonne Wan and Marta de Silva are similarly engaging. Though all three performances are a little overwrought at times, I can’t see how it could be avoided in this narrative. Whilst this experience would no doubt be extremely stressful, keeping the emotional anxiety at eleven all the way through the play is quite exhausting.

This is certainly a story that needs telling, but it feels a little like something that should tour disputed borders, or secondary schools, rather than performing to an already (mostly) left-leaning London crowd. This kind of story should provoke a response, but instead the audience leaves feeling much the same about such conflicts as they did when they entered.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

Photography by Ewa Ferdynus

 

Camden Fringe

The Net

Tristan Bates Theatre until 17th August as part of Camden Fringe 2019

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Sad About The Cows | ★★ | May 2019
The Luncheon | ★★★ | June 2019
To Drone In The Rain | ★★ | June 2019
Class | ★★★★ | July 2019
Sorry Did I Wake You | ★★★★ | July 2019
The Incident Pit | ★½ | July 2019
When It Happens | ★★★★★ | July 2019
Boris Rex | ★★ | August 2019
All The Little Lights | ★★★★★ | August 2019
The Geminus | ★★ | August 2019

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