Helen Hopkins - Carolyn Bock - Samantha Murray |
Director: by
Tom Healey
Set
Designer: Alexandra Hiller
Costume
Design: Lyn Wilson
Lighting
Design: Nick Merrylees
Sound
Design: Nick Van Guylenburg
Presented
by: Critical Stages and the Shift Theatre
The Q, Queanbeyan,
NSW. 24th -26th April, 2014
Touring N.S.W and Victoria May/June 2014
Reviewed by
Bill Stephens.
Three young
women, each from a different background, each with different motivations,
enlist in the Australian Army Nursing Service to assist during World War One. They
find themselves in an unfamiliar land, right in the middle of fierce battles, treating
horrific war injuries without facilities or equipment.
Their
individual responses to their situation provide a remarkably powerful insight
into the world and the work of nurses in the Australian Army Nursing Service in
the Turkish battlefields during the First World War. Playwrights Carolyn Bock
and Helen Hopkins have drawn on actual letters, diaries and eyewitness accounts
preserved in the Australian War Memorial in Canberra to fashion this candid, moving
and impressively presented account of life on active service.
Carolyn Bock as Grace in "The Girls in Grey" |
Gently
allegorical “The Girls in Grey” is presented, without interval on Alexandra
Hiller’s elegant, evocative setting of notepaper messages pinned to a
make-shift hessian army hospital tent. As the play begins, the three nurses, dressed
in long grey flannel dresses and, played in delicately pitched performances by the authors, Carolyn Bock and Helen
Hopkins together with Samantha Murray, prepare their uniforms, read from the
notes, and muse on their lives, aspirations and ambitions. Their various male
relatives, lovers or patients are all portrayed by James O’Connell.
Tom Healey’s
tightly choreographed, almost balletic, direction provides a mesmerising rhythm
to the production. The clarity and diction of the three nurses is striking as
they tell their stories in carefully measured sentences, sometimes alone, sometimes
in unison, and punctuated by moments of meaningful silence. Occasionally they utilise
their hands and aprons to mime medical procedures, emerging or disappearing
almost ghost-like from the deep shadows of Nick Merrylees superb lighting
enhanced by Nick van Cuylenburg’s chillingly
atmospheric sound design.
The production
reaches its highpoint in a stunning finale where the three women, moving in
unison and in silence, slowly and ceremoniously lay out dozens of red poppies reminiscent
of the graves of the war dead. It’s a graceful and affecting image which allows
the audience time to reflect on the play’s powerful message of resilience and remembrance.
Seen on this
occasion at the Q in Queanbeyan on the eve of Anzac Day “The Girls in Grey”
proved the perfect entrĂ©e to Australia’s most significant day of remembrance.
This review appears on the Australian Arts Review website.. www.artsreview.com.au
This review appears on the Australian Arts Review website.. www.artsreview.com.au