Hayley Guthrie in The Collaborator (photo by Kristina Sutherland Rowell) |
The Collaborator
Macha Monkey Productions
Through May 14, 2016
Macha Monkey Productions is doing a little world premiere…
Little in terms of size of cast – one (Hayley
Guthrie). Little in terms of time – about 75 minutes. But big in terms of
playwright – nationally known, but local Yussef
El Guindi, and a big dip into female/male sexual politics.
Directed by Anita
Montgomery, who has worked with El Guindi on at least two of his plays, the
script of The Collaborator begins
with an actor, Cass, addressing the audience. She’s dressed in night clothes
and explains that she and her collaborator, whom she clarifies is male, decided
on the costume and the set, together.
The actor speaks about the actor-ego, the desire for people
to watch an actor, the despair for the actor if people don’t seem interested,
the awareness of people yawning, sleeping or leaving. Then she begins to tell a
story about walking home from her theater-gig as a French maid in what sounds
like a terrible farce where everyone ends the play by slapping each other’s
butts.
There are two men walking toward her on a dark street,
moments from her house, but she is dressed in the French maid outfit with stage
makeup on, and she tells us all the different thoughts that run quickly through
her brain, including, “Maybe they’ve just been watching Hedda Gabler (at a nearby theater) and are discussing Ibsen!”
Of course, they haven’t been discussing Ibsen or watching
theater, and it takes a while for us to find out exactly what does happen, as
she segues into her relationship with the collaborator, which also has ominous
aspects. That’s the heart of what El Guindi wants to explore – the complicated,
gray-area, not-quite-cut-and-dried moments of sexual interaction when awkward
sex drifts into unwanted sex.
There are two aspects to discuss here: the script and the
performance. Evaluating just the script allows for imagining variation from the
current presentation. It has an expansively permissive quality to it. The actor
cast in this role and her interpretation of the script could produce a very
different feeling or outcome for the audience. Still, there is an unfinished
quality to the endin of the script that doesn’t help the audience know what to
make of the journey.
Does El Guindi have a conclusion he’s drawing? Is he trying
on a woman’s perspective in order to learn how to better understand women in
his life? His choice of writing a woman’s narrative is evocative, but as yet,
perhaps, unfulfilled.
Guthrie, new to our region, is a capable actor, and I felt
that she was much more successful when she could play a direct emotion and talk
to another character. The beginning of the play, in her address to the
audience, is far less convincing and the artifice is almost bitingly apparent.
She is supposed to put us at ease, and instead, made my teeth sit on edge. I
enjoyed what the monologue said, mostly, but the delivery, where she is
supposed to be “real,” made me feel like she was the most UN-real of the
evening.
Perhaps that is because addressing an audience for an actor
is not the normal thing to do. As she transitioned into a different kind of
presentation, where she was still supposed to be “herself” but was now telling
a made up story, she becomes a character and therefore, also comfortable in the
role.
There are aspects of new-theater paradigm here that combine in
an interesting way to get at a topic that is supremely personal, yet universally
applicable. The first-person address might be an awkward lecture, or a way to
break down the wall between performer and audience to make it easier for us to
be dragged into the personal journey. It feels like a worthwhile experiment
that can yet go even further before the evening is through.
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