Fairfax Studio, Arts Centre Melbourne, and Feb 13 until Mar 22, 2014
Reviewer: Kate Herbert on Feb 13
Stars:**
This review was NOT written for, or published in the Herald Sun. Sorry it took so long to publish here. KH
The title
of this play made me think of James May on Top
Gear, when he stacks a Bugatti Veyron, sighing with exasperation and
exclaiming, “Oh, cock!”
But Mike Bartlett’s
play with its childishly provocative title, Cock, (attention-grabbing anyone!) lacks
even the wit and complexity of May’s blunt expletive.
A love
triangle with a twist is no novelty – except when it involves a man who cannot
choose between another man and a woman.
Cock is
indulgent and repetitive with thoroughly dislikeable characters that spend
their time bullying each other or simpering and whining and repeating the same
until the end.
Leticia Cáceres’ production is awkward and colourless (surprising
given its content) and the static and unimaginative direction and stilted
performances do nothing to enhance Bartlett’s repetitive and adolescent script.
Bartlett’s
glib dialogue is repetitive and riddled with clumsy interruptions, unfinished
sentences and unresolved thoughts that do not illuminate the characters,
relationships or issues.
These
elements can all work if it is well written or directed, but Cock is neither. It lacks skill and both the script and the direction make these
generally competent actors look all at sea.
Cáceres removes any action based on stage directions, opting for a
stylised, non-naturalistic form, which is a device that can create an
interesting theatricality.
However, in
this case, the abstraction leaves the actors looking as if their feet are
nailed to the floor and makes the rather shallow script seem even less dynamic.
Cáceres sets the entire three-way relationship battle in a sea of
puffy white cushions that are perhaps meant as an obtuse metaphor for the
fluffy thought processes, soft landings or ill-defined relationships – who
knows!
But they manage
only to get in the way of the actors and make any anger or heightened emotion
look like a kids’ pillow fight.
There is no
passion or chemistry between John (Tom Conroy) and the unnamed woman (Sophie
Ross) or man (Angus Grant).
John is a
deliberately sketchy character – a young man whose personality is still
undefined but, oddly, he is the only character defined by a name.
He totters
between his long-term partner (Grant) who is a brittle, controlling,
supercilious, nasty camp stockbroker and the bolshy but nurturin, demanding but
motherly woman (Ross).
This is a
deeply unsatisfying production that fail to penetrate the issues that
are at its centre – sexual preference, love and identity – but, instead, spins
its wheels, reiterating points ad nauseum.
The only
compelling moment was a short speech by John about his journey into practising
homosexuality at university that gave him some structure for his identity.
The final
dinner scene gathers some momentum but by then it is too late for the
production.
This play
should look like a boxing match but it is more like a bouncy castle with
toddlers bumping into each other randomly.
By Kate
Herbert
Cast
Tom Conroy
Angus Grant
Sophie Ross
Tony
Rickards
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