Little Light (Photo by Richard Davenport)
Continuing his first season’s
eclectic mix of revivals (The Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd, Widowers’ Houses) and new writing (TheDistance, Pomona) - all linked by being early works
by each of their writers - the Orange Tree’s Paul Miller follows his Bernard
Shaw production with a play by Alice Birch, a writer whose work I’ve failed to
catch up to now. Although Birch came on to the scene in 2011 with Many
Moons and then won the 2014 George Devine Award for Revolt.
She Said. Revolt Again at the RSC, Little Light actually
pre-dates those plays: it was the first full-length script that Birch completed
and one that is at last being staged following some revisions to it. Personally,
though - and despite a proficient production by David Mercatali that certainly
strives to find the writing’s strengths - I think this particular piece would
have been better off left in the drawer after all.
A seaside house undergoing
renovation provides the setting for a face-off between two couples. Clarissa
arrives pregnant and rain-soaked at the seaside home of her sister Alison.
There’s a fish pie in the oven – cooked by Alison’s lugubrious spouse Teddy - but any notion that this is to be a
run-of-the-mill family reunion soon disintegrates, as the appearance of Clarissa’s lover Simon, and
various small deviations from the established order of things, serve to disrupt
the oddly arranged rites and rituals of a trio trapped by past trauma.
Though Birch’s dialogue tends
towards the off-puttingly mannered from the start (it’s all ostentatious
rhythmic utterances, sudden “lyrical” surges and tediously repetitious
profanity), the set-up of Little Light is relatively intriguing,
and the production stays strong for about half of its 95 minute, interval-free
running time. Making some effective use of the OT space (including the seldom-utilised
top level), Mercatali once more demonstrates his gift for bringing out suggestive,
ominous moments, aided by a sparse, sinister sound design by Max Pappenheim.
In particular, a memorably
unsettling meal set-piece (no one will be rushing out for fish pie after this
production, I think it’s fair to say) evokes the hostility underpinning social
gatherings in a chilling way. Presenting family get-togethers as rituals of
complicity which are contingent upon everyone adhering to the established
script, the play seems on the cusp of revealing something truly disturbing
about the strange sisterly relationship it presents.
However, once the revelations
of the overwrought second half kick in, Little Light starts
to look merely banal, at times suggesting nothing so much as Harold Pinter and
Caryl Churchill taking turns to scrawl over an Alan Ayckbourn play. In essence,
the piece is just another dark-secrets from-the-family-past melodrama, and while
that familiar form could be made to work, the trauma at the heart of this piece
failed to either move or convince this viewer
by the end, with potential emotional involvement foundering due to
Birch’s dialogue, which feels, despite occasional arresting images, overly
calculated and counterfeit. Compare the play to Tim Price’s Salt, Root and Roe – also a portrait of two sisters in a rural locale, and a
work of genuine beauty and eccentricity – and Little Light’s
shortcomings become all the clearer.
The cast – Lorna Brown as
Alison, Paul Rattray as Teddy, Yolanda Kettle as Clarissa and Paul Hickey as
the bewildered outsider Simon - perform well, straining to give even the most wincingly, heavy-handedly
“poetic” passages as much life and
conviction as they can. But there’s not much any actor could make of two risibly
ornate, painfully over-written monologues that conclude the piece, and, during these,
I felt any goodwill I’d had towards the play evaporate. The establishment of Birch
as an exciting and distinctive new voice is certainly underway: she’s
Guardian-endorsed, for one, and has a new work coming up in
Rufus Norris’s first season at the National Theatre. But I found
Little Light to be an unaffecting piece of work that
offers little in the way of real insight and much in the way of grating pretentiousness.
Booking
until 7th March.
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