Wednesday, 26 November 1997

The Park by Steve Wheat, Nov 26, 1997


The Park by Steve Wheat
VCA Drama Studio until Dec 6, 1997

It is such a joy to see a play that confronts grief without indulging in melodramatics. 

Steve Wheat's play, The Park, has a warmth and wry humour which, combined with his sensitive portrayal of four different stories of loss, leaves us with the impression that life insists on running on - even if the tap is at a dribble.

Jason and Julia, (Tom Healy, Jane Longhurst) who run the groovy Le Park cafe, are to be married. Working in their cafe are their chef, Jason's dear old lesbian pal Tina (Liz Welch), Lucy, a young mum (Jo Keen) and Michael (Grant Moulday), their gay friend who arrives from England to unntentionally upset the wedding apple cart.

Wheat has skilfully woven several other stories into the fabric that glows with the muted colours of grief and lightness. Two older couples (John Flaus, Helen Tripp, Joan Murray, Terry Kenwrick) attempt to grieve for the death of their sons. Gabrielle (Emma Strand), girlfriend of one of the dead men, searches for his echo in a man who may have been recipient of his heart (Ernie Gray).

He uses the park, which is beautifully realised in Marc McTyre's set, as the focal location for meetings, revelations, tragedies, romance and farewells. The whole picture is an intricate emotional landscape depicting the inner lives of this collection of characters. We want to know their stories and soak up each new scrap of information.

Aubrey Mellor's subtle and cunningly simple direction does not tamper with the text but allows it to speak and the actors to explore the dynamics of silence as well as dialogue. The stillness is as evocative as the voice.

Mellor has assembled an exceptional cast who have all donated their time to the project. Welch as Tina balances humour with poignancy, Keen vibrates with pain and Flaus's despair was palpable.

Wheat, whose play Cloudburst has had several successful seasons, has written this larger piece for his graduating production. It has his characteristic laconic observations about life and his lyrical writing interspersed with pithy, witty dialogue. It is never glib. His musings on pain and loss are always truthful, poignant and provocative.

The play is 'delicate', just as one character observes. It has a sweet melancholic quality that resonates in the final fireworks display. It's such a little time we have together and life goes on - not with a bang but a squib.

KATE HERBERT

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