Femme Fatale
Omnibus Theatre
Reviewed β 9th October 2019
β β
βultimately, it felt like a surface creation, which failed to realise its deeper ambitionsβ
Andy Warholβs 1967 erotic film βI, A Manβ shows the central male character in a series of sexual encounters with eight different women, including Valerie Solanas and Nico. Valerie was the founder of radical feminist organisation SCUM (the Society for Cutting Up Men) and later went on to attempt to assassinate Warhol, and Nico was the German model and singer famed for her high profile rock βnβ roll affairs, as well as for her work with Lou Reedβs Velvet Underground. On the surface, the two women couldnβt be more different: one a working-class butch lesbian from New Jersey, the other a leggy blonde heterosexual European, and yet, as Polly Wisemanβs play points out, they shared more than their surface would initially suggest. Wisemanβs play throws the two women together in an imagined green room situation during the filming of βI, A Manβ and uses it as a contemporary feminist call to arms. The final image of the piece is a projection of the question, βWhat do you want to change in the world for women?β, and we are invited to pin our thoughts to a noticeboard, or to tweet them, @SCUM2019.
Itβs a great premise, and an admirable cause, and there is clearly an appetite for this kind of work. Hundreds of women were on their feet night after night hearing the clarion call from Morgan Lloyd Malcolmβs Emilia, ββIf they try to burn you, may your fire be stronger than theirs SO YOU CAN BURN THE WHOLE F*CKING HOUSE DOWNβ. Unfortunately, in this case, the touch paper just didnβt light. The play felt hampered by specificity; by the very particular accents required of the performers, and, too, by the notoriousness of the period. The obvious audience enjoyment of Wisemanβs impersonation of Nicoβs infamous deadpan German drawl, added to the smattering of 60s rock icon name-checks β Brian Jones, Jim Morrison, Lou Reed β ultimately detracted from the pieceβs political power. Similarly, much of the quickfire dialogue came across as glib and parodic. When Nico says, βSunshine depresses me. There is too much expectationβ, and Valerie voices the line, βMenβll pay big to shoot the shit with a cunning linguistβ, these broad brushstrokes limit them as women and take away from their humanity, which, in turn, makes it difficult for us to take them seriously. It also seemed a strange decision to characterise Valerie with such relentless cheerfulness. The women are different enough without this added extra thrown in. Another odd choice was the one to have Valerie mention her death by overdose. When Wiseman herself tells us β in Valerieβs potted biography printed in the script β that she died of pneumonia, what does this change do, other than falsely play into the already-problematic late-60s drug narrative that is touched on here?
The show was well designed β credit here to Sally Hardcastle (stage design) and particularly to Nathan Evans and Sophie Bailey for their excellent sound and video work β but ultimately, it felt like a surface creation, which failed to realise its deeper ambitions. Despite the cabaret moments, and the occasional use of direct address, Sophie Oliviaβs Valerie and Polly Wisemanβs Nico never fully reached out and touched us from that stage, which is a shame, because, in reality, those womenβs lives most definitely did.
Reviewed by Andrea Wright
Femme Fatale
Omnibus Theatre until 27th October
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Quietly | β β β | October 2018
To Have to Shoot Irishmen | β β β β | October 2018
The Selfish Giant | β β β β | December 2018
Hearing Things | β β β β | January 2019
The Orchestra | β β β | January 2019
Lipstick: A Fairy Tale Of Iran | β β β | February 2019
Tonyβs Last Tape | β β β β | April 2019
Country Music | β β β β | May 2019
Othello: Remixed | β β β β | June 2019
Lone Star Diner | β β β | September 2019
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