Thursday, April 11, 2024

SEAGULL

  


Seagull

Written by Anton Chekov. Translated by Karen Vickery. Directed by Caitlin Baker and assistade by Karen Vickery. Production Manager/Stage Manager Maggie Hawkins. Stage Manager/Lighting designer Sophia Carlton. Sound designer Neville Pye. Lighting Mentor Stephen Still Armourer Neil McLeod. Set construction Marc Heru. Cole Hilder. Chaika Theatre. ACT HUB Spinifex Street  Kingston. April 10 – 21. Bookings ACTHUB.COM.AU

Reviewed by Peter Wilkins

 

Michael Sparks, James McMahon, Cameron Thomas,
Natasha Vickery, Meaghan Stewart in Chaika Theatre's Seagull

Karen Vickery’s translation of Anton Chekov’s The Seagull is a breath of fresh air. It is lucid with a fluidity and immediacy that makes it thoroughly accessible to a contemporary audience. The dialogue   springs forth trippingly on the tongue with a clarity and intelligence that lends each character an individual truth. Chekov is Stanislavsky’s playwright servicing the director’s method. He gives voice to his character Konstantin (Joel Horwood). Konstantin Treplyov is a new age idealist  fuelling the fire of a theatrical revolution and railing against the conventional  practice of his famous actress mother Irina ( a flamboyant and intriguingly nuanced performance by Karen Vickery). 

Amy Kowalczuk as Polina and Meaghan Stewart as Masha
Vickery’s translation gives licence to the actors of Chaika Theatre to own and fully inhabit Chekov’s characters as though fresh minted for our time, while still paying homage to Stanislavski’s  quest for presenting real people in real circumstances on a modern stage. Director Caitlin Baker’s use of the occasional anachronism may puzzle but they serve the purpose of relevance to our time.  As a doctor, working in the regions and keenly observing the panorama of human experience and emotion, Chekov’s The Seagull is a portrait of longing, of vulnerability and failure, of fame and celebrity and the aching agony of unrequited love and frustrated dreams. 

Michael Sparks, James McMahon and Karen Vickery in Seagull
Director Baker, assisted by Karen Vickery, has cast some of Canberra’s finest to bring Chekov’s characters to life. Famous actress Irina returns to her country estate to attend her son’s avant garde play, starring a wide eyed ingénue Nina (Natasha Vickery) who dreams of becoming  a famous actress. She arrives with her lover Boris Trigorin a famous writer. The characters assemble to see the play. Masha , in a riveting performance of a tortured soul by Meaghan Stewart, is despairing of her unrequited love for Irina’s son Konstantin. The local teacher Semyon (Cameron Thomas) is desperately in love with Masha to no avail. Konstatin and  and Nina are in love until Nina’s infatuation with the famous writer Trigorin (a self-absorbed performance by James McMahon) takes hold. Polina Shamrayev( a subtle and understated performance of a downtrodden wife by Amy Kowalczuk) is married to the boorish property manager (Arran McKenna) who treats her abominably. She seeks a desperate escape in the arms of the  village doctor, Yevgeny Dorn (Michael Sparks). Dorn is  a confirmed bachelor whose life is littered with affairs and sympathetically but selfishly rejects the attention by Amy and her daughter Masha. Arkadina’s brother Pyotr ( performed with a tone of weary resignation by Neil McLeod) is a retired judge who desperately seeks new experiences as he faces encroaching age and failing health..

 

Neil McLeod, Cameron Ryan and Joel Horwood in Seagull
As Chekov's seagull Nina Zarechneya Natasha Vickery radiates a youthful and exuberant passion and innocence in the site specific action of the first act, set outside the ACT HUB venue on the grass and under a cold autumn night sky. Be sure to wear warm clothing and bring a blanket . The setting is ideal for the performance of Konstantin’s play by the lake, where he shoots a seagull to later lay at Nina’s feet and provide inspiration for Trigorin’s prophetic idea for a story. Nina is that seagull, a beautiful and free bird until she is shot down by her love for Trigorin, her abandonment of Konstantin and her flight to Moscow. This is her tragedy and Vickery charts her flight from innocence in the natural environment to the destitution that she suffers after her arrival in the big city.  The second act is played out in a domestic setting within the ACT HUB Theatre.

Joel Horwood as Konstantin Treplyov in Chaika Theatre's Seagull

Horwood and Vickery powerfully embody the struggle of a new generation confronted by the forces of the old order and resistance to change. It is a lesson still to be learned in a modern world of conflict and protest. Both Nina and Konstantin face the dilemma of future possibility. Nina in spite of the tragic experience of her time in Moscow staunchly pursues her dream. Konstantin, his spirit broken seeks the only solace he can contemplate. Vickery’s translation is humanity in all its natural aspects.  Chaika Theatre has presented a Seagull that reverberates with Chekov’s dream for a new theatre while empathizing with those trapped within an old order. He died in 1901 before that new order came to his country and before Chaika Theatre could pay homage in this wonderful production to the gift to theatre of Anton Chekov and Konstantin Stanislavski’s Moscow Art Theatre. Be sure to rug up against the cold during the first act and catch Chaika’s  Seagull at ACT HUB before the 21st April. 

Photos by Jane Duong