The River that Ran Uphill A Slingsby/Flying Squad Production as told by Edgell Junior.
Directed
by Andy Packer and Clara Solly-Slade. Composer Quincy Grant. Designer Slingsby’s
Flying Squad and Wendy Todd. Lighting designer Darian Tregenza, Lighting and AV
Realizer Mark Oatley Performers Edgell Junior,
Alexis West, Jennifer Stefanidis, Delia Olam, Elleni Karagiannidis & Joshua
Campton. The Space. Adelaide Festival Centre. Adelaide Festival March 1 – 6
2023.
Reviewed
by Peter Wilkins
Edgell Junior is a Ni Vanuatu
actor who is now a member of the Flying Squad Ensemble of Adelaide’s widely acclaimed Slingsby Theatre Company.
He is also the narrator of Slingsby’s Adelaide Festival production of The River That Ran Uphill. This is his
personal story, told with the conviction of experience, the illusions of the
theatre and the engaging skill of the storyteller. On stage five members of the
Wan Solbag Theatre Company, a community theatre company of Port Vila gently
kick a soccer ball across the stage. It is an image of casual relaxation and
friendly sportsmanship. It is also the peaceful prelude to a cataclysmic event
about to strike at the very heart of the string of pacific islands that make up
Oceania in the South Pacific.
The sound of the sea swells. The
cries of the gulls are strident in the darkening sky and the familiar sound of
the approaching cyclone utters its warning sounds of Nature’s impending
assault. Edgell has experienced cyclones before but In March 2015 they were not
prepared for Cyclone Pam that tore through their islands wreaking death and
destruction. Using shadow puppetry,
corrugated iron to give the impression of rooves ripped from the sports arena
and blue material to represent the rising waters of the river that seemed to
run uphill Edgell and the other performers, supported by excellent sound and
lighting effects, play out the drama of the cyclone’s devastation.
With Antonio, his manager of the IT Department who is represented by a Gerry can with a portrait of a man’s face on the can, Edgell sets about doing whatever he can to assist his community. The theatre becomes an evacuation centre for the hundreds of homeless people and in the midst of the chaos is a young girl in a red frangipani dress, separated from her parents. Edgell and Antonio set about to save thee young child who was left sleeping as the storm raged. The River That Ran Uphill is a touching and moving tale of courage, community cooperation and survival.
Edgell Junior in The River That Ran Uphill |
Images appear at the back of the
stage including a young girl looking out with an innocent gaze. When the next
cyclone comes more ferequently than the last will she lose her home, her peace
and her hope. Or will she when climate change threatens to submerge her home
still face the world with a Vanuatu smile?
Those who would claim that The River That Ran Uphill is didactic
and political would be doing this production a disservice. As Brecht said, “The
worst illiterate is the political illiterate; he doesn’t hear; he doesn’t speak
nor participate in the politics of life.” Slingsby Theatre Company’s Flying
Squad Ensemble’s production of The River
That Ran Uphill is an honest plea for understanding, compassion and
cooperation that reaches far beyond the islands of Oceania. It is imaginatively
staged storytelling whose lesson needs to be heard and uttered and acted upon.
That is its message of hope.
Header photo by Emma Luker
Photos by Andy Rusheed@Eyefood