R. Hamilton Wright, Jeanne Paulsen, Carmen Roman in The Children (Nate Watters) |
The Children
Seattle Repertory Theatre
Through March 15, 2020
Lucy Kirkwood’s contemporary play, The Children, includes
unusual characters – retired nuclear scientists, and focuses on climate
disasters with surprising ideas. Performing now at Seattle Rep, the play is
both a kitchen sink drama, literally in the kitchen of a dingy decrepit
farmhouse, and an exploration of a world-class dilemma.
It begins slowly and builds slowly. So, one must summon patience.
We first see Hazel (Jeanne Paulsen) in this kitchen who is interrupted
by Rose (Carmen Roman), an old friend/adversary. Rose has separated
herself for years and it takes a fair while for her reasons for returning to
fully emerge.
Hazel and her husband, Robin (R. Hamilton Wright),
are living outside of an exclusion zone after a huge nuclear disaster. The area
of the disaster, this time, is on the coast of some portion of the U.K. Kirkwood
developed this play after the Fukushima disaster in Japan. So, their home and
farm, inside the area, has become toxically irradiated. Electricity is regulated
and scarce, so they can barely use devices like cell phones and computers and therefore
are thrown back toward an older, non-technical way of life. But they’re coping.