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A Streetcar Named Desire

Sat, 11 July 2009, 12:52 am
Gordon the Optom54 posts in thread

‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ is the latest Old Mill Theatre Presentation. This Tennessee Williams’ Pulitzer winning classic is directed by Dannielle Ashton. It was written about the time of the Old Mill’s opening, 60 years ago. The play is showing at the Old Mill Theatre in South Perth, nightly at 8.00 pm until 25thJuly with a 2.00 pm matinee on 12th July. BOOKING ESSENTIAL, VERY FEW SEATS LEFT.

         Just after the Second World War, schoolmistress Blanche Dubois (Jenny McCann), who lives in a permanent state of fantasy, goes to live at the home of her unassuming sister, Stella (Gemma Northover) and rough-diamond brother-in-law, Stanley (Stephen Roberts) in a poor, ethnic area of New Orleans. Stanley is streetwise and will not accept bullshit from anyone – not even family – and isn’t slow to point out any of his suspicions.

        Now, after a failed marriage, Blanche is a 'faded southern Belle', desperate to have a man - not for her normal carnal reasons – but to give her a new life of security, respectability and luxury. Can Stanley’s close friend Mitch (Chris Thomas) help? Will Blanche capture her ‘magic’?

         Stella learns of financial problems within the family, so seeks the help of her landlady Eunice (Jayma Knudson) who lives upstairs.

 

Tennessee Williams’ plays have an amazing structure, every sentence is precise and totally relevant, every place name and character name carefully selected for the hidden meaning or its derivation. There are numerous metaphors, insinuations, implications and deep meanings. In the hands of a weak director the play can easily become futile, with wooden performances as actors lose their way. Here however, Dannielle Ashton was in full control, guiding her cast through the mire of verbal traps to project the full significance of the script’s black comedy, pathos and tragedy.

In the 1951 film, Vivien Leigh and Marlon Brando had the luxury of numerous shots, retakes and multiple breaks; here Jenny McCann had three hours of acting, with what is often recognised as one of the theatre’s most difficult characters to portray, and came away triumphant. Her performance totally captured the complex nature of Blanche’s contradictory temperaments, with her swings in mood and emotion holding the audience spellbound.

The Deep South accent was solid throughout the cast, the short burst of French and Spanish also pronounced with skill. The pace was magnificent, and did not flag for a second. Every actor, from the naive newspaper boy (Tony Minchin) and the old Mexican woman (Kyla Jones) selling flowers for the dead, right to the main characters captured their parts perfectly.

The set (Hywel Williams and Tim Prosser) of this decaying tenement flat was furnished with fittings and furniture of the period, the walls were the old arsenic green paint colour. There was a remarkable, functional upstairs balcony. A secret hinged wall allowed fast and effective scene chances. The costumes (Merri Ford) depicted the social class, the period and the character’s personality. Stella’s flat was cleverly lit with a dozen recessed lamps, perfectly placed and operated. The musical mix of Creole, honky-tonk and authentic streetcar sound effects (Molly Sheehan) rounded off the spectacle.

This community production must be one of the most professional in years, and is as near perfect as one can get. This is a strong cast and offstage team, who have obviously worked tirelessly together. See it if you can. Truly magnificent and worthy of a standing ovation.

That's very nice of you to

Mon, 27 July 2009, 09:59 pm

That's very nice of you to say so, Sister x Two...thanks very much. I have no doubt that there are those who would prefer me to keep my opinions to myself at times!

It's now many, many years since I saw the film starring Marlon Brando and Vivien Leigh, and I probably lacked the maturity at that time to fully understand its sub plots and implications. With my part in the production (the set painting) finished, I enjoyed the luxury of seeing Danni's handling of the play as a member of the audience. Now that its run is over, I don't suppose there's any harm in at least saying that I got so much more out of the story this time around...and that is, of course, thanks to Danni's decision not to compromise by cutting the less than savoury elements out of it, as did Elia Kazan in 1951 in order to make it more palatable to cinema-goers in a time when sexuality and, more particularly, homosexuality, was not so openly talked about.

Despite it being a sad and grimy story with no happy ending, I was totally absorbed in its telling by an outstanding cast of talented performers. It's a play in which every word is important, so it's vital to pay attention if one is to keep up with it. Every one of the cast played his or her part compellingly and utterly convincingly, so there was no chance at any time of audience attention wandering...at least for me, anyway. Special mention must be made of the variety of accents, some of which can be difficult to reproduce convincingly, but which never faltered...not even once, that I can recall.

All this is purely academic now, of course, considering that the run is over, but suffice to say that I think it could have run for another two weeks and still been booked out solidly. It really was very, very good theatre. I'm always reluctant to single out cast members over others, so I won't do so...but I will say that my admiration for them all is extremely high. Danni, as director, should be (and I know that she is) very proud of what she, and they, achieved with this classic, gritty tale of love, loneliness and tortured sanity.

If there's only one play I'd like to have been in this year, this one would have been it! 

 

 

Per Ardua Ad Astra

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