Thursday, 27 November 1997

Maelstrom by Chris Dickins , 27 Nov 1997


Maelstrom by Chris Dickins
At Beckett Theatre, Malthouse
By Ballarat University until Nov 29, 1997
Review by Kate Herbert around 26 Nov 1997


"Don't stand in my shadow, Don't stare in my face" is the imperative of the aggressive and disenfranchised youth of Chris Dickins play, Maelstrom.

I'd be inclined to heed them. They're scary people.

The graduating year of Ballarat University Performing Arts with director Peter Tulloch, play fourteen characters in a socio-political narrative which resonates with the darker outcomes of the 'sell, sell sell', behaviour of the Victorian government.

A condemned property with a fabulous view of the Casino complex is occupied by a tribe of angry squatters under the near-fascist leadership of a very disturbed but charismatic young man, J. J. Rider. Dickins reveals all their fraught stories but the central narrative deals with the siege on the house that has a bloody end.

Dickins plot confronts betrayal, abandonment, abuse and suicide. The young people try, in the face of their shattered lives and impending disaster, to survive but even they know they are fighting a lost battle.

The project is the third piece commissioned by Ballarat from Dickins and is a change in tone from his usual work that is lyrical and poetic. Maelstrom is a brittle and agitating piece that retains his signature poetic text but is generally riding the boundaries of negativity. It opens with a feisty rap chorus number that really kicks.

The young actors are committed and make a good ensemble but many cannot balance the verse form with the rough-as-guts dialogue. Although it is obviously written as a vehicle to showcase all fourteen performers, the series of monologues and the relentless rage become tiring and the story loses its focus by trying to cover too incorporate too many threads. Some ruthless editing and a concentration on J.J., his father and his dear friend Harlan, might have made a more successful script.

There is some evocative lighting designed by Bernadette Haldane, and an effective grunge set design. However, too many clumsy scene changes were a distraction. Most of the actors had trouble finding the emotional truth in the text and ended up yelling and over-stating. There was one exceptional performance from Melissa Casey who not only found the colour and texture in her distressed character but she
surprised us with a great jazz voice.

KATE HERBERT

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