The Picture of Dorian Gray by
Oscar Wilde
Directed and adapted for the stage by Kip Williams. Featuring: Designer: Marg Horwell Lighting
Designer: Nick Schlieper Composer & Sound Designer: Clemence Williams Video Designer: David Bergman Dramaturg: Eryn Jean Norvill Production Dramaturg: Paige Rattray Voice and Text Coach: Danielle Roffe Assistant Director: Ian Michael. Sydney Theatre
Company Roslyn Packer Theatre. Until
January 9th. 2021 Bookings: 02 9250 1777.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
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Eryn Jean Norvill in The Picture of Dorian Gray | |
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To say that I was blown away by
Kip Williams’s production of The Picture
of Dorian Gray for the Sydney Theatre Company would be an understatement. I
am not given to unconstrained hyperbole but hyperboles afford the greatest
accolades for Eryn Jean Norvill’s portrayals of Oscar Wilde’s enigmatic
characters. For two hours traffic on the stage, Norvill intrigues, captivates,
dazzles and delights her audience as she moves seamlessly from narrator to
character in the telling of Oscar Wilde’s entire short story of the Adonis like
youth whose corrupted Faustian desire
for youthful immortality is revealed in the portrait while Dorian Gray retains
the beauty of his younger years. It is a moralistic tale more clearly expressed
in a contemporary mantra of “Be careful of what you wish for!”
In Eryn Jean Norvill we behold an
ascending star of the Australian stage. Under Kip Williams’s inspired flight of
the imagination she commands a mesmerising hold over her audience, aided by
Williams’s use of video cameras to create live streamed and pre-recorded
footage of Norvill as storyteller, Dorian Gray, the hapless artist Basil
Hallward , the corrupting Sir Henry Wotton and a host of other characters that
populate Wilde’s Victorian fantasy. At times, in a feat of technical wizardry,
live streamed characters interact with pre-recorded and edited video footage
upon one of the many video screens upon the Roslyn Packer Theatre stage. The
skilful video operators in black also double as brilliantly disciplined props
handlers and dressers, supporting Norvill’s lightning speed changes, while
never allowing the action to lag. The entire production is a joyfyl expression
of perfect timing and stage movement. Williams has used video technique before,
most notably in his engrossing production of Brecht’s
The Resitsable Rise of Arturo
Ui, but nowhere with such ingenuity and faithful adherence to Oscar Wilde’s
period and extravagance.
Wilde’s philosophical moralistic novel,
The Picture of Dorian Gray, drawing as
it does upon Victorian Gothic influence contains a bitter irony of an older man’s
corruption of a beautiful youth, a reversal of Wilde’s own experience and
downfall due to a love for his Adonis, the beautiful Bosie, son of the Marquis
of Queensbury. In Dorian Gray’s cruel and unwitting treatment of the innocent
Sybil Vain, we see the cruelty suffered by Wilde as a result of his blinded
love for Bosie. The challenge facing Kip Williams has been to stage the
adaptation as a one woman performance, while bringing to life the various
characters of the novel. Williams’s vision and Norvill’s astounding performances
combine in a theatrical tour de force that not only breathes new life into
Wilde’s portrait of art for art’s sake and the corrupting power of the human
heart and mind, but projects an exciting new destiny for the theatre. Our
willing suspension of disbelief is nowhere better engendered than in the Sydney
Theatre Company’s ground-breaking production of
The Picture of Dorian Gray. Williams’s direction and Norvill’s
performance make this the hottest ticket in town. The ephemeral nature of
theatre is its own
tragedy. To miss it
would be yours.
Photos by Dan Boud