Written by Geoff Page – Directed by Kate Blackhurst
Set designed by Rohan Moss – Lighting designed by Ben Pik
Sound Design by Neville Pye
Presented by The Acting Company and Shadowhouse Pits
The Courtyard Studio – Canberra Theatre Centre – 4 – 8 December 2019
Set designed by Rohan Moss – Lighting designed by Ben Pik
Sound Design by Neville Pye
Presented by The Acting Company and Shadowhouse Pits
The Courtyard Studio – Canberra Theatre Centre – 4 – 8 December 2019
Reviewed by Bill Stephens
How pleasant to come across a play where the main
character looks back at her life, not with regret about lost lovers or missed
opportunities, but with satisfaction on what fate has handed her.
In this final play in a trilogy of verse plays written
by Canberra playwright, Geoff Page, which commenced with Laurie and Shirley, followed by Cara
Carissima and finally Coda for
Shirley, Shirley is now 81 years old. She has written her will, and knowing
that her two daughters, Sarah(Nikki-Lynn Hunter) and Jane (Elaine Noon), will
not be pleased with her decisions about what they consider to be their
inheritances, decides to write them a letter explaining her motivations.
During the course of the play, we hear Shirley’s
version of events, the daughter’s versions of the same events, as well as from
Jen (Alex McPherson) the almost-wife of one of Shirley’s two adult grandsons,
and herself an unwitting beneficiary of Shirley’s will.
Page’s poetry is witty and graceful. The actors are largely successful in
achieving a naturalistic delivery of the verse so that the listener quickly
becomes involved in the storytelling, only occasionally being jolted by an
obvious or misplaced rhyme.
Micki Beckett gives a charming portrayal as Shirley,
now confined to a wheel-chair by hips that haven’t worn as well as she has.
She’s content with her 30 year marriage to Ted, and unrepentant of her
late-in-life fling with Lawrie, after Ted had died. She has no delusions about
her daughter’s ambitions, and loves them in spite of their flaws and their
disapproval of her relationship with Lawrie. She derives particular pleasure from
the attentions of her two adult grandsons, both university drop-outs, one to
pursue dreams of becoming a rock star, the other to work in community health.
Director Kate Blackhurst has opted for a static
production, with the emphasis on the delivery of the writing. Rohan Moss’ appropriately
simple set design has Shirley seated in a wheelchair centre stage for the
duration of the play. Her two daughters’ occupy stools at a bar on one side of
the stage, with the other side taken up by a large circular garden swing from
which the almost-wife of one of her grandsons delivers her lines. Each area is
illuminated as required to indicate changes of locale. The rhythm is leisurely
and the delivery concise, giving the play a dream-like quality.
This works very well at first, because the play is
mostly concerned with memories. However the lack of visual stimuli together
with a surfeit of details referencing events dealt with in the first two plays,
together with a succession of false climaxes towards the end suggesting some
reluctance by the author to let go of his characters, leaves the impression
that as enjoyable as it is, “Coda For Shirley” would benefit from some judicious
cutting and tightening.
This review also appears in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.artsreview.com.au