Sunday, June 23, 2024

A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE - Free-Rain Theatre.

 

Amy Kowalczuk (Blanche DuBois) - Alex Hoskinson (Stanley Kowalski) in
 "A Streetcar Named Desire  

Written by Tennessee Williams – Directed by Anne Somes

Set design by Dr Cate Clelland and Ron Abrams – Costume Design by Fiona Leach

Lighting Design by Craig Muller – Sound Design by Neville Pye

Vocal and Dialect Coach: Sarah Chalmers – Intimacy Co-ordinator: Karen Vickery.

ACT Hub 19 – 29 June 2024. Performance on 22nd June reviewed by BILL STEPHENS


Despite having had many different interpreters, to many the 1951 film of Tennessee Williams’ searing examination of marital relationships which starred Vivien Leigh as Blanche DuBois, Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski and Kim Hunter as Stella Kowalski has become the template and definitive interpretation of this play.

With her powerful production for Free-Rain Theatre in the ACT Hub, Director Anne Somes proves that there are other ways to skin a cat by casting three of the city’s finest young actors in Amy Kowalczuk as the delusional Blanche DuBois, Meaghan Stewart as Blanche’s sister Stella Kowalski, and Alex Hoskison as Stella’s Polish husband  Stanley Kowalski.


Meaghan Stewart (Stella Kowalski) - Amy Kowalczuk (Blance DuBois) in
"A Streetcar Named Desire"_


Somes has drawn finely delineated performances from all three actors and surrounded them with an excellent cast of supporting actors to portray the friends and neighbours of the Kowalski’s.

When Blanche (Amy Kowalczuk) unexpectedly comes to stay with her sister Stella (Meaghan Stewart) and her husband Stanley (Alex Hoskison) in their tiny two-roomed apartment in a run-down tenement, she quickly makes her distaste for Stanley, his poker-playing friends, and the couple’s cramped apartment, evident.

Stanley resents Blanche’s intrusion into their life and makes little effort to hide his feelings or make Blanche feel welcome. Newly pregnant, Stella finds herself walking on eggshells as she tries to keep the peace between the two.

Amy Kowalczuk is simply riveting as Blanche DuBois. Her depiction of Blanche’s slide into madness is fascinatingly detailed allowing the audience to empathise with Blanche’s predicament as her web of lies begins to unravel, while understanding the havoc her presence is wreaking on the Kowalski’s marriage.

Similarly impressive is Meaghan Stewart’s nuanced performance as Stella, initially delighted by Blanche’s visit but increasingly unsettled by her husband’s response to her.  Stella is eventually torn between her loyalties to her husband and her sister when Stanley discovers that Blanche has been less than candid about her past, and his treatment of both Stella and Blanche becomes increasingly more violent.


Meaghan Stewart (Stella Kowalski) - Alex Hoskison (Stanley Kowalski) in
" A Streetcar Named Desire"

While totally convincing in his depiction of Stanley Kowalski’s unapologetic oafishness, Alex Hoskison remarkably impels the audience to feel sympathy for Stanley’s predicament in having his life intruded upon by Blanche while at the same time being repelled by his brutish treatment of her.

As the cuckolded Harold ‘Mitch’ Mitchell, who Blanche expects to marry as a way out of her own situation, Lachlan Ruffy creates a sympathetic and believable character.

Tim Stiles and Sarah Hull portray the Kowalski’s neighbours, Steve and Eunice Hubbell, who live above the Kowalski’s in an apartment with walls so thin that Blanche is bothered by their love-making.

Lachlan Elderton, James Morgan, David Bennet, Olivia Wenholz, Rina Onorato, Rica Oyolla and Mercy Lelei play various other characters that populate the Kowalski’s world.


Alex Hoskison (Stanley Kowalski) - Meaghan Stewart (Stella Kowalski) in
"A Streetcar Named Desire".


Fiona Leach has created a fascinating wardrobe for Blanche to provide clues to her squandered wealth, as well as a variety of period clothing for the rest of the cast to compliment the carefully selected furniture and properties with which Cate Clelland and Ron Abrahams have furnished the Kowalski’s claustrophobic apartment.

A pity then that distracting changes in lighting states midway through scenes, and some misjudged set changes, especially following the rape when for no logical reason the neighbours suddenly burst in and begin cleaning up the debris and setting up the card game as Stanley changes clothes in full view of the audience, completely evaporates the shock value of the preceding scene, marred this otherwise impressive production by Free-Rain Theatre.  


                                                Images by Jane Duong.