by
Alexandra Wood
Spanish
Inquisition
A mother
and daughter circle each other like bull and matador in this spare, deliberately rhetorical modern take on a "restoration" play .
Underlying
an apparently unspecific play, couched clues emerge anchoring arguments in an analysis of Spanish historical and
current day complexities.
For this two-hander examines what is meant by
merit in a country riven between a modern economic democracy and a conservative hierachical restored
monarchy inextricably linked to the theology of the Catholic church.
Written originally as a response to the economic crisis in Spain, playwright Alexandra Wood chooses to focus on two women sparring over what had been traditionally male domains: employment, finance and politics.
Written originally as a response to the economic crisis in Spain, playwright Alexandra Wood chooses to focus on two women sparring over what had been traditionally male domains: employment, finance and politics.
But
the men here, a father, an employer, an uncle and a cousin, never appear and we
have to rely solely on the women's perspective adding an air of mystery and
distrust to the mixture.
Recent
graduate Sofia (dark-eyed Ellie Turner) has landed "the job of her dreams"
outdoing her contemporaries mired in unemployment. But from the start her
mother Patricia (Karen Pascoe) immediately interrogates her like a suspicious
heckler at a public meeting.
Gradually,
on a traverse stage - flanked by two Japanese screen-like walls - with flecked
marble ground and steps designed by Philip Lindley, we learn more from glacial splinters of
conversation.
Sofia's
job is for a leading merchant banker in the glass fronted soaring towers of the
financial district, ringed by armed security guards. As paternal job loss and threat of foreclosure loom, Patricia unable to find a job resorts to
political activism.
There is a touch of Rosencrantz and Guildernstern Are Dead in Merit, although the humour is somewhat downplayed in Tom Littler's production. Music, mirrored costume changes and lowered blue tinged lighting (sound: Max Pappenheim, lighting: Rob Mills) divide somewhat awkwardly ten staccato scenes mixing detective story with dialectic.
There's an emphasis on opposition and argument at the expense of the wit and the meditation on class and money. Still, at a time, when even in the acting profession the nature of merit has come under scrutiny, this play may still have the potential to strike a nerve, so an amber light for an intriguing piece.
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