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Oasis, Oasis
fortyfivedownstairs, Melbourne;
Thursday, April 17, 2008. Opening Night Performance. Review by ANNE-MARIE PEARD.
Until April 27. Bookings: www.oasisoasis.net. |
Some
people can chose the right words, then put them in an order that makes your insides stir.
Adam Cass writes beautifully. And he understands how to use beautifully arranged words to
create engaging and moving theatre. Oasis, Oasis
is his most recent work. This production deserves to be seen and loved.
Before the show even begins, the audience move into an intimate, warm and gentle
atmosphere. Creating this in the large, and potentially distracting, space at fortyfive
downstairs is an achievement. Lighting (Lisa Mibus), design (Amy Feiner) and live music
(Amanda Medica and Andrew Crosbie) combine to maintain this sense of welcome throughout
even the darkest moments of the piece.
Have you ever watched someone cry on train and looked away? Or found yourself
crying on a train? Theres a strange freedom of being totally anonymous in a crowded,
public place. What would happen if someone was
brave enough to ask if youre OK? Then
followed you off the train?
Cass finds the poetic and the theatric in unexpected places. This story is set in a
crowded peak hour train, busy city streets and the top of a high building. Yet we never
hear the noise or feel the crowded frustration. We are clearly in the lonely minds and
empty hearts of the two characters.
Theres nothing original about Maude and Penelope. They have the same problems
seen on daily TV soap. But they are authentic and alive because we recognize ourselves in
them. This quite remarkable writing exposes the universal (and/or the archetypal) in their
ordinary existence and ordinary problems. Theres nothing unique about heartbreak,
loneliness and despised jobs, but we care about these characters because we recognise the
feeling of pointless grief and our inability to escape from its hurt.
At the same time, these women face genuine problems. They act and they change. With
a subtle, constant tension of mystery and confusion, Cass confronts our expectations by
making us doubt their truth, doubt their sanity and even doubt their reality. His language
is gorgeous, but the words would collapse without the intricate and strong supporting
structure.
Past and present effortlessly merge, as the inner thoughts and outer actions of the
women. Its like lava lamp. The heavy
purple of the past sits within the fluid blue present. They never mix, always change and
create a much more enchanting whole together. Luckily,
Cass writes better metaphors than I do. His imagery is distinct and heavy, but its
so natural for grief to dance in his world.
Theres also a lot of comedy in this script, but its getting lost. I
found the same thing in his last work I Love You Bro. The
humour is deliciously dark. A 75% bitter-sweet dark chocolate isnt as widely loved
as a caramel filled bear-like-marsupial-shaped chocolate, but its sophisticated
taste goes a long way and its really much better for you. There seems a resistance
to laugh out loud at this type of humour. Jokes dont have to have a punch line and
laughter pause.
Cass
also directed Oasis Oasis. When a writer directs their own work, it offers a
rare chance to really see the playwrights vision and intent. His direction is nearly
as beautiful as his writing. His knowledge of his own work gives a clarity and depth to
every element of the production. The vision is supported through the design, the
performers know their characters, the pace is superb and the music is as close to perfect
as live music can be in a play. However, one day, I would really like to see how a more
distant and less attached director sees this script. Sometimes a stranger can see so much
more in a piece of writing than the author intended.
Sarah Hamilton and Katie Astrinakis clearly love this work. It is a joy to see
actors loving their characters and sharing the vision of the director and writer. Both
performances need to settle though. I could see too much acting and technique. This will
change as the run continues and they trust that their rich performances and the magic
words are reaching the audience.
Oasis, Oasis capture of the loop of loneliness, failed relationships and hated
jobs is almost sublime, yet it lets us soar out of the misery into a place where happiness
is possible. This is beautiful, beautiful
theatre.
Independent theatre makers usually dont receive funding or subsidy or cash
from any source than the box office. Adam Cass is performing a one-off-one-night-only-one-one-man-show
called The Tom Rescue Monologue as a fundraiser to get I Love you Bro to the 08 Edinburgh Fringe. Its
on Sunday 20 April at 8pm, also at fortyfivedownstairs. Entry is by donation. |