We at Trafficlighttheatregoer Towers are pleased to
welcome Francis Beckett, author, journalist, playwright, contemporary historian
- and now guest reviewer on trafficlighttheatregoer.com :) Find out more about
the newest addition to our team at http://www.francisbeckett.co.uk/
My Mother Said I Never Should
By
Charlotte Keatley
A Woman's Century
Four
generations of women, the eldest a baby before the First World War and the
youngest starting life almost three-quarters of a century later. Each
does the best she can for her daughter and herself - within the
limitations imposed on them by the society into which they are born.
This
beautifully-observed and carefully-researched piece records, without comment,
the decisions they make. Decisions which sometimes appear incomprehensible only
a few years later, yet at the time they seem like the only responsible paths to follow.
Despite
earnest attempts in the programme to bill My Mother Said I Never Should as a
worthy feminist piece, the play, set in Manchester, Oldham and London, is far
more interesting. As much an account of a changing yet still cruel society by a woman playwright who understands that inequality and unfairness, while certainly
penalizing and punishing women, punishes men too.
Written
more than 30 years ago in 1985 when Charlotte Keatley was just 25, it
still comes alive as if fresh-minted with the magnificent performances at the
St James Theatre in Victoria.
There’s
the always wonderful Maureen Lipman as Doris – no one in the world does a
cantankerous mother better. Alongside her, Katie Brayben as granddaughter
Jackie, Caroline Faber as Jackie's mother Margaret and Serena Manteghi's great
granddaughter Rosie. All young performers who match Lipman's presence and
professionalism.
It’s
a testing play for actors who must age purely physically, as any gap
is too short to allow for the application of make up. Yet the audience easily
recognizes when, for example, Katie Brayben's Jackie is four, 14 or 40 years old
before she even opens her mouth.
It may
not be a perfect play, nor for that matter a perfect production. At the start, director Paul
Robinson introduces some abstruse movement and stamping of feet which made me
fear that the evening was going to sink under the weight of mysterious
symbolism.
Occasionally the
odd line is a little too deliberately trying to be a tearjerker – “You’ll never call me
Mummy,” cries Jackie as she hands over her baby.
But
at these moments, the production always manages to recover its equilibrium
quickly and this absorbing, sometimes very funny, evening in the theatre easily
earns a green light.
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