Essex Girl
The Vaults
Reviewed – 7th March 2019
β β β β
“Ferguson tells Kirstyβs story with heart and humour, invoking millennial nostalgia by spraying Charlie Red and swigging WKD Blue”
Early 2000s Brentwood: By day, 16-year-old Kirsty and her friends attend a Catholic all-girls school, wearing hideous βdeck chairβ striped uniforms. By night, theyβre in platform heels, push-up bras, and skin-tight dresses, downing cheap pre-drinks and conning their way into clubs. On the surface it seems fairly harmless β theyβre young, having fun. But the truth is Kirstyβs friends arenβt that nice, and the boys (or men) she meets arenβt that nice either. Actually, most of the time, Kirstyβs not having very much fun at all.
Essex Girl, written and performed by Maria Ferguson, is a scathing one-woman show that confronts a zeitgeist and incisively articulates the damage absorbed by the girls who lived it. But the performance isnβt overtly angry β Ferguson tells Kirstyβs story with heart and humour, invoking millennial nostalgia by spraying Charlie Red and swigging WKD Blue. Instead, like the microaggressions Kirsty encounters, Fergusonβs feminist criticism is insidious. It appears in seemingly offhanded comments: The girlsβ schools all have slut-related nicknames (Sacred Heart = Sacred Tarts). The Campion boys donβt have any nicknames. Thereβs impressive craft in this execution.
Ferguson is a gifted performer. She uncannily embodies the contradiction of the fag-smoking, liquor-drinking, thong-wearing 16-year-old, who is, inescapably, still a child: naively believing her predators are her friends. She tells rich, authentic stories slashed with sharp observation. She describes a time she and her friends, tottering in heels, waited while a bouncer checked their fake IDs. She says only that he looked the girls over, but her delivery communicates volumes: He knew they were underage, but gauged they were sexy enough to be good for business. What do club-prowling, money-spending men want? The bouncer lets them in as casually as tossing bait into a shark tank.
Although the monologue can meander at times, the genius in Fergusonβs script is the subtlety with which she reveals, through entertaining anecdotes, the way girls are primed for abuse. In a land of tanning beds, heavy makeup, and fake tits, Essex girls learn that the goal is to be desired, and to change themselves to achieve it. Kirsty learns all the words to a song she doesnβt like to impress a guy named Ricky. She rates her value on whether or not Ricky wants her. It never occurs to her to re-evaluate whether she should want him: someone who ignores her most of the time and has Guns Nβ Roses bedsheets. Kirsty and her friends have been taught to want men to want them, but nothing about having standards for men who respect them.
Of course the power of Essex Girl is that it isnβt just about Essex. Fergusonβs honest and frank account of a teenage girlβs experience will resonate with women regardless of whether theyβre from Brentwood, or even the UK. Through skilled storytelling, Ferguson has percipiently captured the moments of injury β the ones most grown women have forgotten, looking at an array of bruises and wondering where they all came from. A valuable addition to the current feminist dialogue.
Reviewed by Addison Waite
Photography by Suzi Corker
Essex Girl
Part of VAULT Festival 2019
Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com