The Ideal Woman
Cockpit Theatre
Reviewed – 11th August 2019
β β
“whilst the Cognatus Theatre troupe clearly have good intentions, βThe Ideal Womanβ brings nothing new to the conversation”
With the βtime to make herstoryβ tagline, and lengthy choruses of βI feel guilty (when I donβt smile, when I defend myself etc)β, βMy mother told me (not to climb, to wear nice clothes, not to ask questions etc), and βWe are rising, we are burning redβ, the intention of βThe Ideal Womanβ is clear: This centuryβs womenβs movement is on a precipice of (hopefully) great change; moving from a very old restraining structure of what a woman should be, to something resembling equality and liberation.
But as much as Iβm obviously a supporter of the βtimeβs upβ/βme tooβ campaigns, it wonβt do to just state oneβs belief in the womenβs movement a bunch of times and call it content.
The setting consists of a web made of red thread, tied at four corners (presumably because women are caught in a society-spun web of restraint?) Four women approach from each corner of the room in beige underwear holding red candles and singing in a tribal chorus. For the next forty minutes some kind of narrative unfolds: starting with a tribute to motherhood, followed by a christening of some kind, and then a playground scene. There are moments of lucidity, but itβs mostly made up of abstract vignettes: Vinna Law performs a short aerial hoop routine, for example, whilst begging someone unseen for forgiveness; Morgana Baldissera approaches, kisses her on the forehead and wishes Law dead.
Itβs simultaneously too abstract and lacking depth. The opening sequence was so stereotypically βperformance artβ, I assumed it was a parody, but it couldnβt have been more earnest. In fact this is its saving grace. Itβs clear the whole cast has complete faith in their performance and the message theyβre conveying – they are not cynical in any way. But, Iβm afraid, stating that women have had a rough time of it, but that theyβre not going to take it anymore, is old hat. At one point they straight up quote what I recall was a popular sign at the 2017 Womenβs March, βWe are the heirs of the witches they tried to burn.β This appears to have no reference to the showβs content, except that itβs an βempowering messageβ.
Unfortunately, whilst the Cognatus Theatre troupe clearly have good intentions, βThe Ideal Womanβ brings nothing new to the conversation. It is only forty minutes, however, so thereβs not much lost in dropping by and having a look for yourself.
Reviewed by Miriam Sallon
Photography by Vinna Law
The Ideal Woman
Cockpit Theatre until 14th August as part of Camden Fringe 2019
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
The Distance You Have Come | β β β β | October 2018
Don’t You Dare! | β β β | November 2018
Unbelonger | β β β Β½ | November 2018
L’Incoronazione Di Poppea | β β β β | January 2019
Mob Wife: A Mafia Comedy | β β β | January 2019
Cheating Death | β β | February 2019
Bed Peace: The Battle Of Yohn & Joko | β β β | April 2019
Lysistrata | β β | June 2019
Much Ado About Not(h)ing | β β β | June 2019
Alpha Who? | β β β | August 2019
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