The Almighty Sometimes by Kendall
Feaver
Lachlan Houen –
Director/Producer/Lighting Designer Caitlin Baker – Set/Costume Designer.
Marlene Radice – Sound Designer/Composer. Sarah Chalmers – Voice and Text
Coach. Kristy Griffin – Movement Coach. Lucy van Dooren – Stage Manager. Olivia
Boddington – Marketing Assistant.
Cast: Winsome Ogilvie – Anna. Elaine Noon – Renee.
Robert Kjellgren – Oliver. Steph Roberts – Vivienne
Q
The Locals. The Q. Queanbeyan Performing Arts Centre. November 19-22.
Reviewed
by Peter Wilkins
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| Elaine Noone 9Renee) and Winsome Ogilvie (Anna) in Kendall Feaver's The Almighty Sometimes |
Lachlan Houen’s production of
Kendall Feaver’s award winning play The
Almighty Sometimes is not easy to watch, which is exactly why this powerful
and compelling drama about mental illness is must see theatre. The direction is
tight and sensitive. The setting by Caitlin Baker is simple and yet evocative
against a lit cyclorama and with screeds of inscribed paper flowing from the
flys to the floor below. Marlene Radice;s subtle score lends an air of
discomfort to the possibility of the unpredictable. Houen’s lighting
is sombre, illuminating a sense of foreboding.
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| Anna and Renee in The Almighty Sometimes |
Feaver’s dialogue resounds with the voice of authenticity, crying out from the heart as the four characters struggle with Anna Jean Phillips’s mental condition. As Anna Winsome Ogilvie gives an extraordinary performance plumbing the depths of spontaneous and confused outbursts. From the 17-year-old teenager on medication to the eighteen-year-old suffering withdrawal and seeking independence from her mother Renee, played with the plaintive helplessness of a distraught parent by Elaine Noone, Ogilvie presents a victim tangled in a search for answers and escape. Ogilvie gives an emotionally charged performance that demands engagement. Hers is a performance of enormous promise as an actor to watch out for. She is ably supported by Noone and boyfriend Oliver, adroitly played with awkward bewilderment by Robert Kjellgran on crutches. Steph Roberts is the child psychiatrist Vivienne who has been treating Anna since the age of eleven. Roberts exudes professional ethic, bound by her role to remain detached and yet fascinated by Anna’s flood of creative imagination in her childhood stories.
Feaver immerses her audience in dilemma. We are presented with conflicting emotions and needs. No person is an island. Cause and consequence are flip sides of the same condition and an excellent ensemble cast grapples with the impact of Anna’s condition on their own lives. We are faced with questions that provide no resolution. Anna’s dramatic and destructive withdrawal emphasises the benefits of medication in controlling the erratic outbursts or illogical argumentation. And yet they remain a symbol of dependency, depriving Anna of identity and free will. The heart aches for Renee, a mother fraught with inability to cope. Anna is no longer the child under the child psychiatrist’s treatment. Each character, Anna, Oliver, Renee and Vivienne are caught in a spiraling vortex of uncertainty. Oliver can leave. Vivienne can pass Anna on to an adult psychiatrist, but for Anna and her mother, as with everyone who faces the struggle with a mental condition, hope rests in Feaver’s play with trust in medical advice, love and support.
The Almighty Sometimes is a touching and important account of mental illness and its impact on families and society. It is both timely and relevant and is an advocate for empathy and awareness. “You are not alone” a sign says as you enter the theatre. There is support and help and Kendall Feaver’s play opens a window to the light. Q The Locals is to be highly commended for the courage to present such a significant and finely staged production of Feaver’s play. If edited down to a little over an hour a touring version to schools and community organizations of The Almighty Sometimes would be an ideal and necessary community theatre piece. Whether a two-hour mainstage work or a shorter community theatre version The Almighty Sometimes is a play never to be ignored.
Photos by PHOTOX






















