Rating: 3/5
There is a promising signal of authority in the first moments of Sophie Motley’s theatrical debut as Artistic Director of The Everyman when the pleated crimson sweep of Danny O’Mahony’s accordion coincides exactly with the parting of the crimson proscenium curtains. That authority applies as a declaration of Motley’s free-range approach in her adaptation of John B Keane’s novella of 1977.
Lit by Stephen Dodd’s brightly sympathetic design, the setting by Pai Rathaya offers a wilderness of captured envelopes, itself suggestive of the futility of written communication. This might suit a modernist postal system but it was not what Keane had in mind, given the variety and vitality of his writing for what amounts to a chronicle of the Irish diaspora.
The generously multi-tasking cast is led by Tadhg Hickey as the postman who never has to ring twice, and the atmosphere of jovial impersonation is maintained with energy throughout, sometimes to excess. What’s missing is acidity, the contradictions as well as the subtlety of Keane’s writing, where the pathos of a deserted young woman waiting for a letter contrasts with the postman’s advice on avoiding the lascivious wiles of females.
The chief problem is not so much a mis-handling as a mis-reading. The amplified characterisations of each episode cannot merge easily into narration, and there is meagre affection for the postal system itself as social connectivity just as efficient and far more dutiful than Twitter or Facebook.
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Source: IrishTimes - 🏆 3. / 98 Read more »