Disclaimer first: This will be the idiot’s review, as I am
not familiar enough with Euripides' play The Bacchae, its various re-stagings, or even Classical
Greek Theatre.
But I know what I like.
The Bacchanals is
certainly deserving of a more informed critic. Adopting the metatheatrical
frame of actors preparing before a performance, the play tells the story of the power dynamics behind the all-female
chorus of 6, as they strategise, form alliances, and plot against one another. The
central figure of Dionysus – omnipresent and yet invisible – presents both an
object of their anger and their chief tormentor. What follows is a kind of
classical tragedy re-set in the dressing rooms of the British theatre, as the
women jostle, ally, and attack their way through various formations of human
struggle.
It’s a faultless premise that renders the politics of the
original play accessible for a new audience, while casting informed and
refreshing comment on the play itself. Watching the actors back-stab and bitch
their way around the all-white Ikea set which forms the casual environment of
the dressing room – intensely private, almost sacred – is as deeply interesting
as it is pleasurable. Their machinations are only interrupted by bursts of seamlessly-inserted
direct quotations from Euripides’ The
Bacchae, which itself brings a certain dream-like violence. It’s a play that’s not afraid to be trashy
as hell, and the effect is a kind of Real
Housewives of Camden, only with a higher potency, and probably less men.
The feminist interpretation of Euripides text is clear from the
beginning, as the piece opens with an erotically-charged choreographed tableau (movement
choreography by Christina Kapadocha) – a kind of ritualistic manoeuvre that nods to the play’s
Ancient Greek origins. But as successful at these choreographed moments are,
there’s also an interesting side-effect that reverberates long after the
choreography is over: I don’t think I’ve ever seen such precise ‘chorus work’,
if you can call the work of the ensemble that, on the stage before. This
ensemble are simply, for whatever reason, extremely connected. Coupled with the
sure direction of Phoebe Ladenburg it makes for some sublime instants, as actors place
themselves in a seemingly casual and everyday manner – tying shoes, adjusting make-up – only
to pause in something resembling Raphael's School of Athens. A movement on one side of the stage finds its reverberation on the other, as though it's all part of some giant web. It really is exquisite stagecraft,
pulled off by a completely in-sync chorus - with Ladenburg perhaps enjoying the
liberation of the tiny stage of the Etcetera.
The legitimacy of the feminist argument is unquestionable,
without being forced. It’s by no means the first interpretation of The Bacchae
to offer a feminist reading (Carol Churchill and David Lan in the 80’s, for example), but I
can’t imagine a more successful one. The characters ruminate over the
democratic nature of sharing lines (“Did you learn my lines as well?”), lament
on the lack of female roles handed down to them by the Ancient Greeks (“I’ll support
anything that gives me more roles”), and throw in – again surprisingly
effortless – contemporary references (after making a conservative argument against
adapting from the past traditions of the Ancient Greeks rather than recreating
them, an actor is met with “I bet you voted Leave”). The piece delves into hopeless
comedy, a phone call to an ex-lover beginning in strength, and descending into a
desperate scream of “I LOVE YOU!!” transitions smoothly into a violent and revolutionary contemplation of tearing Dionysus limb from limb (one asking “Do you
think we could?”, the other “Do you think we couldn’t?”).
Eventually, they do. The almighty Dionysus, an insipid
parody of patriarchy, thrusts his way onto the stage proudly. But by this time,
we know what’s coming. And even the most stout boys club puppet-master would have
to take a share in the satisfaction of the masculine, ideal god shown to be
mere mortal against the performative strength of these women, as they symbolically
revolt against the structure, first by robbing him of his lines, before devouring
him on our behalf.
It’s a cathartic end, but it’s not the whole. And The
Bacchanals remains impressive not only for its targeted attack on patriarchy, particularly within theatre, but its
delicate and nuanced examination of women. It’s a timely piece in this regard,
tapping into the conversations around representation both on and off the stage,
as well as relationships between women, achieved by going back to the root of
the problem in the origins of Western Theatre. I doubt there are other contemporary interpretations that would be
as successful, or as cogent.
The Bacchanals closes tomorrow, but hopefully not permanently.
See it.
The Bacchanals
Directed by Phoebe Ladenburg
with Aamira Challenger, Lauren Orrock, Kaiti Ntirintaoua, Alexandria Macleod, Bess Roche, and Josh Richards
Presented by Mikra Theatricals
Movement Choreography by Christina Kapadocha
The Bacchanals
Directed by Phoebe Ladenburg
with Aamira Challenger, Lauren Orrock, Kaiti Ntirintaoua, Alexandria Macleod, Bess Roche, and Josh Richards
Presented by Mikra Theatricals
Movement Choreography by Christina Kapadocha
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