At one point, Siobhan McMillan tells her director, Gabi Maddocks, to budge up so she can sit on her chair and take a break, we’re not sure if it’s Siobhan or Shivvers, Penelope, Madison, Shy Girl or any one of the characters her physical, exhausting and emotionally pounding performance has evoked. Mirrors is a many-layered tale that blows the fourth wall and hits the audience right where it hurts – audacious, deadly accurate and disabling; she’s very funny.
It’s also a challenge to absolutely switch off the male
gaze and engage. This is not a play written for either sex – we’re all in it
together – and whilst my wife laughed with recognition at truths acknowledged
in close-quarters, I also got the point being a little bit Jim, Shaun the
brutal “life-coach” and even Mickey. Mirrors
is ultimately about kindness and that’s no fairy tale fantasy.
The story begins with Shy Girl, a video blogger telling
all to her eight new subscribers and revealing a soft centre used and abused by
Mikey, her boyfriend of six and a half weeks who would have character failings
if only he had a character. Mikey is a dead end of a sexual partner and a dead
loss as a boy-friend, standing his girl up in front of her audience.
Siobhan McMillan, all photo by Thomas Ashton |
As with other witches in unrelated fairy tales, Shivvers
has a mirror and a man inside it (say hello to Jim) to provide positive reinforcement
and advance early warning of breaking new beauty. Shivvers time comes and she
is shocked to the core. She won’t take this lying down and goes off in search
of the new sexual superpower in order to drain her essence and just bloomin’
well kill her to death.
She spies an impossibly pretty lass singing along with
birds, bees and all the cute animals – she’s as perfect as Amy Adams in Enchanted
and enough to make our bad witch vomit. Shivvers lies down in the forest with
her own creatures – worms, frogs, cockroaches… waiting to strike at Bitch Face.
But all is not as it seems after darkness falls and Shivvers sees her foe
eating four “human males”, toes first and all the way through guts and garters
to their hearts… it’s a measure of Siobhan’s expression that she is able to
describe this process with a mixture of revulsion and admiration – and much
more besides… it’s certainly not something I’ll be forgetting in a hurry and I’m
avoiding the woods from now on.
This is the beauty of Mirrors,
the meaning is smuggled in under the stories and even as you’re trying to work
out what just happened we’re already in another world, the huge house of
perfect Penelope who throws her impossible beauty away with an overdose of neurosis
and then a self-help group, Chips and Dips Anonymous, where over compensatory
crisp consumption is a problem doubled through sharing.
Siobhan McMillan, photo Thomas Ashton |
Mirrors is a special play and Siobhan McMillan is clearly
a special performer – her movement is exceptional as is her physical expression
– creating an old hag through mime (you can take the girl out of RADA but…)
like Lindsay Kemp in a black dress or Kate Bush on the moor. She
uses every inch of the Theatre Lounge’s tight spaces to express herself and to
pull us in.
That’s brave and, as it happens, that’s entertainment. I
would love to watch this play all over again and urge you not to miss it.
Mirrors runs until 14th April so please get a
move on!!
Ithankyou Theatre rating: ***** They talk of immersive… but this is a very personal theatrical
conversation! We loved it!
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