SISYPHEAN QUICK FIXβ―
Riverside Studios
β β β
βThe performances by Paris and Tina Rizzo remain as strong throughoutβ
No one who is actually fine says βIβm fineβ. A line we hear often in life, and more than once in Bettina Parisβ play βSisyphean Quick Fixβ. So, when London-based struggling actor, Krista, asks her sister how their father is β and she responds with a shoulder-shrugging βheβs fineβ β we know thatβs not true. The sister, Pip (Tina Rizzo), still lives in Malta where they grew up. Krista left to pursue her dream, which is on the cusp of being attained although she is currently a penniless, stressed barmaid. The siblings have comparisons and contrasts. Pip is a career woman, dresses smartly and has the luxury of slowly chewing over a marriage proposal. Krista meanwhile is unlucky in love and life but unbound by expectations. What they do share, however, is a strong childhood bond. And an alcoholic father. The feelings of responsibility are equal, but what is contentious is each otherβs share of the burden (especially as Krista lives far away). The play steers through the minefield of emotions as their fatherβs illness deteriorates.
Paris herself plays Krista and, apparently, the subject is based on real life experience. She has a natural onstage presence that puts us at ease. The opening scenes are light-hearted and full of expressive and witty dialogue that firmly establishes the sistersβ strong bond and affectionate rivalry. Nicky Allpressβ slick and intuitive direction creates two separate worlds that eventually converge into one. Initially, Oliver McNallyβs lighting separates these worlds, bathing Pipβs Malta in a rusty glow while Kristaβs London has the cold, hazy hues of the βBig Smokeβ. A middle ground is found when Krista travels back to Malta.
Unfortunately, it is in the middle ground where the writing starts to get too comfortable. And the stakes donβt feel quite as high as they should. The performances by Paris and Tina Rizzo remain as strong throughout, but the offstage characters come to us second-hand without really coming to life. They wonderfully show us the effects their father has on their lives, yet the complexities of the causes remain underexplored, weakening the heart of the matter. The focus is still very much on Pip and Krista. And a wonderful, honest portrayal of their relationship it is. But although we get a sense of the sacrifices they make, we donβt feel the force of the circumstances that drive their decisions.
Ubiquitous questions surface: βcould we have done more?β or βweβre going to be okay?β β the latter weighed down by its oversized question mark. Admittedly there are no definitive answers but in this play the questions seem a touch unearned. The title alludes to the Greek myth of Sisyphus, who was condemned to roll an immense boulder up a hill only for it to roll back down every time it neared the top β repeating the action for eternity. In contemporary culture, tasks that are considered laborious or futile are described as Sisyphean. βSisyphean Quick Fixβ, however, is quite the opposite. Played out in short, fractured scenes there is an effortlessness to the staging that deals with an important, pertinent and universal topic. Which paradoxically also creates the problem β we donβt fully grasp the real struggle. The finely crafted writing needs just a few more sharp edges for it to cut through beyond the skin.
SISYPHEAN QUICK FIXβ―
Riverside Studios
Reviewed on 19th March 2025
by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Marusia Makhmutova
Previously reviewed at this venue:
SECOND BEST | β β β β | February 2025
HERE YOU COME AGAIN | β β β β | December 2024
DECK THE STALLS | β β β | December 2024
THE UNSEEN | β β β β | November 2024
FRENCH TOAST | β β β β | October 2024
KIMβS CONVENIENCE | β β β | September 2024
THE WEYARD SISTERS | β β | August 2024
MADWOMEN OF THE WEST | β β | August 2024
MOFFIE | β β β | June 2024
KING LEAR | β β β β | May 2024