A silver slide. Vases of
yellow flowers. Some red balloons... James Turner’s spare set design for Rania
Jumaily’s production of Adam Barnard’s new play buckets may
possibly reflect straitened circumstances at the Orange Tree, since the
theatre is (for shame) no longer in receipt of regular Arts Council funding.
But, with its suggestions of
the festive and the funereal, the mischievous and the melancholy, Turner’s simple,
sparse design actually provides an ideal ambience for Barnard’s play, which
touches on Big Themes - memory, mortality and the moments that shape and define
human lives - in a mostly merry, ludic manner.
An alumnus of the Orange Tree
Trainee Director scheme 2003-4 (he’s directed Torben Betts’s The Company Man at the OT, amongst other shows), Barnard has increasingly
turned his hand to writing in recent years, and his short play Closer
Scrutiny was a memorable part of the Orange Tree’s great Festival
last year, an extravaganza that was one of 2014’s theatre highlights for me.
buckets,
Barnard’s first full-length play, is a very different proposition, however. The
action here unfolds in around thirty scenes: some super-short sketches, others
more sustained narratives. In them, a talented multi-tasking sestet of
performers - John Foster, Tom Gill, Charlotte Josephine, Sarah Malin, Rona
Morison and Sophie Steer - zip through multiple roles and scenarios that range from
the realist to the absurd, incorporating elements of soap opera, surrealism and
even sci-fi. Doctor/patient and teacher/pupil duologues, an ailing teen’s
encounter with a pop star, a suicide attempt that gets interrupted by a mugging…
these are just some of the many incidents that the play presents as it explores
time and the transience of human experience.
With dialogue unattributed,
the number of cast members unspecified, and a flexible approach to staging
advocated, the form of Barnard’s play owes a rather too obvious debt to
selected Caryl Churchill works, notably 1978’s The After-Dinner Joke (itself revived at the Orange Tree last year) and 2012’s Love
and Information. But it’s a friendlier piece than either, and while
some sections fail to ignite or feel half-baked, others prove engaging and effective.
Much of the appeal of the
evening is down to the cast, who, barefooted and casually clothed, work
together wonderfully well. Malin’s metamorphoses into a stroppy teen and,
later, a parent bemoaning her daughter’s lack of rebelliousness
are especially choice, and Foster is just wonderful in a lengthy sequence
in which his character expresses curiosity about the longevity (or otherwise) of the existence
he’s been assigned under a so-called “Living Vessels Incorporated” scheme.
There’s
a slightly calculated eccentricity to the production that might grate on some, and
a few a cappella musical interludes add disappointingly little to the experience.
But, moment by moment, there’s much to delight and surprise in
buckets.
Booking
until 27th June. Further information at the
Orange Tree website.
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