The Shape of the Pain
Wilton’s Music Hall
Reviewed – 19th March 2019
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“It is a piece about love and pain. And understanding. And it is extraordinary.”
The Shape of the Pain was developed by Rachel Bagshaw and Chris Thorpe as a theatrical exploration of Rachelβs experience of living with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome β a neuropathic condition that causes constant chronic pain. As the performer articulates in the opening moments of the piece: β[It] is an experiment. In how we talk about pain. If we can ever talk about it in a way someone else can understand.β The piece is also about love; specifically about this womanβs experience of falling in love, and of being in love. It is a piece about love and pain. And understanding. And it is extraordinary.
The elements of the show are simple: one performer, a curve of dark grey metals joined edge to edge onto which text, light and occasional monochrome images are projected, and a soundscape. The piece runs at seventy minutes, and it is a testament to the performer Hannah McPakeβs exceptional skill that time passes in a moment, and we are released back into the world after what seems like an extended breath β in some way subtly changed, as if we had been taken apart and reassembled.
Chris Thorpeβs writing is magnificent, swooping as it does between lyricism, abstraction, disintegration and the concrete. It is just devastatingly good. The poetry is everywhere. In angry lists. In everyday observations. And in metaphorical flights of fancy. It is also a hymn to the word βfuckβ, in all its splendid incarnations.
The writing and the performance operate within an intricate web of light and sound. Melanie Wilsonβs textured soundscape is stunning, and Joshua Pharoβs spare video and lighting design is another essential part of this intense and darkly dazzling piece of theatre.
Works of art which endure seem always to have the ability simultaneously to address specific experience and yet encompass the universal. The Shape of the Pain belongs with these. It leaves you with a greater understanding of this rare and complex condition, but also with fresh insight into what it is to be human. It is a rare privilege to see work of this calibre. Go.
Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw
Photography courtesy China Plate
The Shape of the Pain
Wilton’s Music Hall until 23rd March
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Songs For Nobodies | β β β β | March 2018
A Midsummer Nightβs Dream | β β β Β½ | June 2018
Sancho – An act of Remembrance | β β β β β | June 2018
Twelfth Night | β β β | September 2018
Dietrich – Natural Duty | β β β β | November 2018
The Box of Delights | β β β β | December 2018
Dad’s Army Radio Hour | β β β β | January 2019
The Good, The Bad And The Fifty | β β β β | February 2019
The Pirates Of Penzance | β β β β | February 2019
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