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The Memory of Water

Thu, 9 July 2009, 08:27 am
Gordon the Optom9 posts in thread
‘The Memory of Water’ is a play written, in 1996, by Northumbrian writer and actor Shelagh Stephenson. This black comedy was winner of an Olivier Award in 2000, and UK Play of the Year in 2001. It is showing nightly at 7.30 at The Playhouse, 3 Pier Street in Perth, until 19th July.

          It is 1995 in a small village near Whitby, and three sisters have gathered at their mother’s home on the eve of her funeral. Mary (Rebecca Davis), a doctor of psychiatry, after a long journey is sleeping in her mother’s bed. She is awoken by Teresa (Michelle Fornasier), a frumpy hypochondriac who is devastated by her mother’s passing. Teresa has the funeral planned to the smallest detail. The two sisters start to discuss their childhood, and one wonders if they were actually present at some events, or if indeed they took place.
          When outspoken, tactless, hippy Catherine (Melinda Dransfield) arrives, she relates her mainly imagined suffering as a child, and how her life has become such a mess as a result. Childhood battle lines are recreated and defences erected. The girls demonstrate that it is not what is remembered, but rather how it has been stored in the mind.
          Mary has quite a long chat with an elderly relative (Julia Moody) who seems to remember the children’s childhood in a completely different light. When Mary’s selfish lover, married doctor Mike (Geoff Kelso), arrives in a blizzard, his presence is accepted by the family with differing attitudes.
          Teresa's husband, Frank (Stuart Halusz), has suffered from Teresa’s neurotic outlook on life for decades, and wants to escape to a better life.

The play makes use of the metaphor of homeopathy, where an essential ingredient is watered down to a ‘drop in the ocean’ and yet is still thought to possess the ‘magic action’. Here it is compared to the generations of gene mixing, and how tiny mannerisms and attitudes can persist.

The set (designer Steve Nolan) is outstanding, with an amazing amount of attention to detail – even the dome clock in the passageway was working! It was truly an old lady’s bedroom. The lighting (Joseph Mercurio) was generally simple, but had a couple of good mood effects. Sound designer, Ash Gibson Greig introduced a hospital respirator sound each time the aura of the departed mother was around.

Roger Hodgman, former Artistic Director of Melbourne Theatre Company, kept the action moving along on this superbly constructed, but difficult to execute, play. A tale which is a blend of tragedy and fond memories. Julie Walters was one of the first actors to appear in this play, and this cast adopted her accent fairly convincingly, however I felt at times that the concentration on the accent distracted the actors from their parts. With the entire cast having very different characters, it was essential that a rapport was built up between the siblings, so may I suggest do not worry about the accent as long as the interaction melds.
Good strong cast, but particular praise for Stuart Halusz and Michelle Fornasier as the neurotic couple, and Melinda Dransfield as the tasteless runt of the family.

I much preferred the dramatic sections to the comedy, but the whole play was satisfying and great fun, which will be particularly appreciated by audience members who come from a large family.

THE MEMORY OF WATER

Mon, 13 July 2009, 12:49 am
I have seen so many plays, films and TV stories recounting or recreating the horrors of family reunions : birthdays, christmasses, funerals and wakes, weddings, etc, and how things go so pear-shaped, that I wonder how I had been spared such hideousness in my sheltered upbringing. At none of these occasions have I experienced the bitter back-biting portrayed in these works of fiction. So it was with some trepidation that I decided to return to my seat after interval – I had, after all, paid for a full night's entertainment. I noticed that the seat next to me was now vacant, so perhaps I was not the only cynic in the house. Up to this point, 'Water' had all been minor variations on a well-worn theme – the bereft family gathers, the stock characters - the professionally successful yet barren elder sister, the Martha-like stay-at-home, the ditzy no-hoper youngest sister – and share misconseptions of what life was like under the influence and favouritisms of the deceased matriarch. All very well acted, but very stock characters, getting drunk or stoned and telling bitter truths or lies about each other and intermittently falling into each others' arms in reconciliation. I was, however, some-what rewarded in the second stanza, when the depth of characterisation and the intensity of emotion was developed in both the writing and the performances. But, after all said and done, it was just the same old, same-old maudlin Irish Roman Catholic slice of life with a bog-English accent (which, incidentally, I might have expected the Doctor-sister, at least, to have overcome). And, in the middle of a blizzard, with characters entering with snow on their hats (a nice detail) why was the downstage-left electric fire not alight? Picky-picky, but I still can't see why this play has had such great press overseas. 'Great fun' Gordon? I think not. FLIPMAC

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