What do the birds
do when it’s raining, do you think? Do they have somewhere to go?
John Fitzpatrick’s new play is packed with powerfully rendered
characters and asks difficult questions about family and motherhood. At one
point elderly Nora’s daughter-in-law asks why she should protect her and yet we
know she has no other choice having been both protected herself and overwhelmed
by the woman whose intelligence and strength are ebbing away eroded by dementia
and simple old age.
It’s a terrifying thing getting old, a tragedy as my own
grandmother once called it, that turns the carers into the cared for in ways
that are never convenient, nor welcomed. Nora (superbly played by Paddy Glynn)
is a former business woman who is now reliant on her son Stuart (Daniel
Crossley) and his wife Eileen (Shelley Atkinson) to help her daily routine. She
enters their kitchen at the start of the play with toilet paper stuck to her
heel after a incident in the bathroom: Eileen picks up the sticky remnant and
fibs after Nora doesn’t hear her reference to poo. It’s a mark of how far she
has fallen; she’s either unaware or in denial and it’s that tipping point so
many will know.
Eileen is the main carer with Stuart busy being busy and
requiring micro-management to do anything other than maintain a cheerful
confidence in crossing that bridge when and if it comes… She wants his mother
to live in a granny flat in their garden but Stuart has taken a long time doing
nothing on it. He’s in denial and takes refuge in his work.
Danielle Phillips, Daniel Crossley, Rohan Nedd and Shelley Atkinson (All photographs courtesy of The Other Richard) |
There’s an extra urgency to this plan as their 15-year old daughter Caitlin (Danielle Phillips) is pregnant by unknown hand… and for various reasons left it too late to raise the alarm. Her baby needs a room and Eileen can’t deal with both first and second childhood all at the same time.
The dialogue is well wrought, and the actors deliver with
quality and precision. You can totally believe that Eileen and Stuart are
married – they know each other’s weaknesses as well as their own and there’s
humour to be had here as well as the routine niggling of the passing decades.
Eileen is fed up of being the one mailing things happen
and berates both husband and daughter for pulling away from Nora whilst at the
same time ignoring the signs that she needs help. There’s particular poignancy in
Nora’s lucid moments, she is probably the brightest of them all and nails so
many home truths in her smiling Wicklow accent, laughing at the ridiculous of
it all.
“It’s only the
Irish who walk into the sea. You wouldn’t see an English woman walking into the
sea…”
Paddy Glynn and Danielle Phillips (Photo The Other Richard) |
Nora tells Caitlin of her aunt who lived long enough to tell her of the potato famine and the cruel tragedies of a world turned to ash and a million Irish deaths all but engineered, in her mind, by the British. It’s a reminder of how cruel things can become and how we need family, community and kindness.
Caitlin begins to draw closer to her nanna as her own
story is revealed. A one night stand with her pal Colin (Rohan Nedd) has led to
her predicament but she’s keeping him quiet. Colin wants to help but he can’t
give any more than he already has for, whilst he was Caitlin’s way of ticking
off the box of experience she was his confirmation of his true sexuality.
Caitlin loves Colin though and he tries to be a steadfast friend… bringing her ancient
library books on maternity.
They’re both so young and even though their mistake could
cost Caitlin her ambition to be an actress, she is growing up quickly as a
result, recognising her importance in helping both her mother and grandmother.
It’s a good set up and the narrative doesn’t take the
easy way as we delve deeper into Eileen’s past – now she appears to be the strongest
character and yet it wasn’t always so and once Nora held everything together
after post-natal depression almost finished her and her daughter off.
The story is well revealed and maintains a light tone
between the sledgehammer blows… these are maintained right until the final
punchline as things go a lot like life.
Daniel Crossley and Shelley Atkinson (photo The Other Richard) |
Paddy Glynn is great a twinkle in her eye and pure fear
as her world retreats into a dislocated fog. Daniel Crossley I’d seen before in
Lizzie Sidall at the Arcola (and also The Bill!) whilst Shelley Atkinson showed
all her stage experience as the pitch-perfect woman squeezed between obligation
and love: she owes Nora more than she wants to admit.
It’s disconcerting when the actors look out into the
audience at the Latchmere, they can see us just as well as we can see them and
for parts of this play I was cast in the role of a potential granny flat in the
garden: typecasting... but who am I to argue with such a forceful cast.
Reared is a Bold
& Saucy Theatre Company presentation and plays at the Latchmere until 28th April,
you’d be daft not to see it and you’d have to have a heart of stone not to
stumble out into the rain-sodden streets of Battersea as I did and give your
Mum a call.
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