THEATRE
By Alan Bennett, Melbourne Theatre Company
At Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne, until March 9, 2019
Reviewer: Kate Herbert
This review is NOT published in Herald Sun. KH
By Alan Bennett, Melbourne Theatre Company
At Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne, until March 9, 2019
Reviewer: Kate Herbert
This review is NOT published in Herald Sun. KH
Miriam
Margolyes
|
Miriam
Margolyes bustles about the stage like a demented doll in The Lady in the Van, bossing
and bellowing at her reluctant and conflicted 'neighbour', Alan Bennett - or is
he her ‘host’?
In his play, directed here by Dean Bryant, Bennett
depicts himself as two separate aspects of his character: Alan Bennett 1
(Daniel Frederikson) who reluctantly allows this recalcitrant, old lady to park
her equally scruffy van in his garden indefinitely and assists her with letter
writing and numerous complaints against the society on the fringes of which she
dwells.
Alan
Bennett 2 (James Millar), dressed identically to his doppelganger, scribbles in
his notebook, journalising every eccentric activity of his malodorous subject
whose name, she says, is Miss Mary Shepherd.
Margolyes'
performance is bold, vigorous and comical, and intermittently reveals a vulnerability
that allows us to see the inner turmoil and fractured mind of this peculiar,
former nun who lives in her squalid van but still clings to a thread of
dignity.
Miriam
Margolyes
|
Bennett's
characters and narrative gently raise issues of tolerance, community spirit and
the failures of the social welfare system, while the middle class characters,
Pauline (Fiona Choi) and Rufus (Dalip Sondhi) pretend to be liberal and spout
sympathetic, lefty rhetoric while shunning the lady in the van.
The
cast is strong, however the episodic structure and lack of depth of most
characters, apart from Miss Shepherd, make the play feel like it skims across
the surface of the story.
The
staging cunningly creates a sense of location by sliding chairs, fences and even
vans on and off stage on invisible tracks, but this device becomes distracting.
The
Lady in the Van is a gentle, funny and sometimes moving story about a woman
whose life should have gone along another track and it reminds us that we are
becoming a less caring community that needs to assist and provide for its more vulnerable
members.
by Kate Herbert
Miriam
Margolyes, Daniel Frederiksen, James Millar
|
Miriam
Margolyes – Miss Mary Shepherd (Margaret Fairchild)
Daniel
Frederikson -Alan Bennett
James
Millar -Alan Bennett 2 The Writer
Fiona
Choi -Pauline
Dalip
Sondhi Rufus
Jillian
Murray- Mam
Ricahrd
Piper -Doctor/ Garden Workman
Claire
Healey - Social Worker/
Set
& Costume- Alicia Clements
Lighting
-Matt Scott
Composer
/Sound Designer- Matthew Frank
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