The staging of these three quite distinct but thematically
linked plays was stark and brave making the most of the JST’s intimacy whilst
still somehow leaving the players so isolated. In Krapp’s Last Tape,
Krapp (James Hayes) is lit by a single overhead light as he huddles over his
reel to reel; the darkness makes him feel less alone, he says, yet it serves to
accentuate his isolation and a course he has chosen if not exactly welcomed.
In Eh Joe, the titular character (Niall Buggy) is
filmed by a video camera which is simultaneously projecting the recording onto
the wall behind. It’s very powerful as the actor’s wordless performance is
magnified as he listens to imagined the voice of an old lover (a chilling vocal
performance from Lisa Dwan who I’m sure left shards of broken glass on the floor
of the recording booth…) slowly break him down into tears.
Niall Buggy (Joe). Photo Robert Workman |
In Krapp’s Last Tape, a 69-year old man listens back to recordings he made at 39 when he had seemingly found his motivation for writing whilst at the same time losing out in a relationship that could have gone on a lot longer. He tells himself he does not regret the passing of his youth in the tape and in the present day says the same thing even as he winces at his own vocalisation of creative hope. I loved the patient staging here and the long moments of silence as Krapp goes around his desk to unlock his drawers revealing a banana; pretty much the first sound he makes is to cry out after he slips on the discarded peel.
James Hayes (Krapp). Photo Robert Workman |
In comparison, The Old Tune was light relief as two old pals meet by chance and share misaligned memories of their past. In fairness Mr Cream (David Threlfall) has trouble remembering his grandchildren let alone previous decades and his pal Gorman (Niall Buggy) is little better, their recall about as reliable as Gorman’s malfunctioning barrel organ. Time is passing them by just as relentlessly as the constant stream of modern motor cars that often interrupt their discourse. Just two old fellas wondering what became of the people they used to be.
A tip of the hat to Louie Whitemore's atmospheric set and
costume design as well as Max Pappenheim’s sound which plays such a vital role in
all three plays especially in capturing every crack and syllable of Lisa Dwan’s
voice and foregrounding the relentless rumble of progress passing by Cream and
Gorman.
David Threlfall (Mr Cream). Photo Robert Workman |
Hi - I've been trying to find your contact details to send you an invite for a press night, but haven't been able to track them down. Is there a way I can contact you directly?
ReplyDeleteHi, yes I should put that on the site!! Best to use: p.joyce4@ntlworld.com thank you! Paul
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