Motherland by Katherine Lyall Watson.
Directed by Caroline Dunphy. Composer and sound designer Dane
Alexander. Set and costume designer Penny Challen. Lighting designer David
Walters. A Critical Stages and Ellen
Belloo Production. The Q Theatre. Queanbeyan Performing Arts Centre. May 25-28
2016
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
For many years now Critical
Stages productions have confronted important issues, taken risks and maintained
a professional and innovative standard of excellence. Motherland, currently being performed at The Q Theatre in
Queanbeyan maintains Critical Stages’ excellent reputation, a reputation shared
with Ellen Boo, whose mission is “to bring people and stories out of the
shadows”
Barbara Lowing as Nina in Motherhood |
Motherland does just this. Epic in its scope, the play spans the
twentieth century, three continents, World War ll, the Russian revolution and
Queensland’s Fitzgerald inquiry into corruption. In merely ninety minutes of
uninterrupted drama, the play examines the lives of three remarkable women and
their relationships during times of momentous struggle and conflict. It is a play
of survival, of the indomitable human spirit and of the consequence of love’s
fortune. Central to the drama is the story of Nina, played with powerful
conviction by Barbara Lowing. Nina is the survivor. She has lived through the
Russian Revolution, the two World Wars and the oppressive Stalinist regime. Forced to live with a secret, she must conceal
her love for Brisbane woman, Nell Tritton (Kerith Atkinson), a passionate devotee
of Russia and its culture, and eventually the wife of exiled Russian Prime
Minister, Alex Kerensky (Peter Cossar). The stories of Nina and Nell are based
on real life characters, whose fascinating and meaningful lives have been lost
in the shadows of time. They are brought to life in Motherland with passion, poignancy and respect for the dramatic and
life changing experiences of the victims of history’s tidal force and relentless
swathes through humanity.
Barbara Lowing as Nina and Kerith Atkinson as Nell Tritton in Motherhood |
Playwright Katherine Lyall Watson
introduces another woman, Alyona,( Rebecca Riggs) a Russian refugee from
Moscow, who with her son, Khodasevich,( a difficult and undeveloped role,given only a
cursory characterization by Daniel Murphy) escapes with the help of Australian
Chris, also played by Cossar, to Australia, in an attempt to create a free and
safe life in a foreign land. Pervading the fate of all three women and the men
in their lives is the omnipotent nature of the Motherland. Nina struggles with her male intellectual
lover, Sasha,in a more effective and engaging performance by Murphy, through
her writings and advocacy to battle oppression and survive the corruption and
brutality of a motherland battered and bruised by historical events and
political power struggles. Nell must flee her adopted motherland to be with
Kerensky, only to eventually return to die in her Australian motherland. Alyona
desperately strives to discover herself in her adopted Australia, while her son
longs to return to his motherland. Longing tears the characters apart. “Do you
regret the choices you made” Alyona asks of Nina. “What we seek is redemption”
is Nina’s cryptic reply. This is the tragedy all characters are compelled to
confront in this gripping account of displacement, fractured dreams and
confused identity.
Barbara Lowing as Nina in Motherhood |
Director, Caroline Murphy
seamlessly directs her actors to keep the action fluid as actors change
characters and switch swiftly from scene to scene, emotion to emotion and
Moscow to France to Brisbane. This
ambitious attempt to embrace the sweep of time with the experience of the
people caught up in history’s turmoil is not without its challenges. Each
story, and especially the true stories of Nina and Nell, their relationships
and their illicit love is food enough for a far more expansive drama. An excellent
cast, highlighted by the dynamism of Lowing’s mature and powerful performance,
strive to engage an audience in a story across countries and time that is too
fleeting in its account and disempowers a more intense engagement with theme
and character. I would have preferred Lyall Watson to have focused on the real
life drama of the lives of Nina and Nell.
From the stirring Russian Workers’ chorus that opens the play to the
deafening blasts of wartime artillery and the poignant reading of Nell’s
letters to Nina towards the end of the performance, Motherland never ceases to involve. As a touring production, easily
transportable, finely directed and expertly performed by a fine cast, with a
sensitivity for the many issues and the lives of real characters, Motherland will fascinate and provoke thoughtfulness
and empathy.
Daniel Murphy as Sasha. Rebecca Riggs as Alyona and Peter Cossar as Chris in Motherhood |
This production of Motherland from Critical Stages and Ellen Belloo has left me intrigued, grateful for the powerful and true stories that deserve to
be told, and yet feeling that so much
more of this tale still remains hidden in the shadows.