Les Blancs
by Lorraine Hansberry
Circling The Wagons
In
an unnamed African colony, sits a skeletal missionary building, the beleaguered
inhabitants of which are sitting out the last days of Empire clinging to their
faith in medical science, religion and their reason for being there.
With its backdrop of the vast African landscape, Les Blancs, was put together posthumously by writer Lorraine Hansberry's
ex husband Robert Nemiroff from her notes and drafts after her premature death from cancer in 1965.
Best-known for A Raisin In The Sun - in some ways a response to Clifford Odets' Awake and Sing!, this work with its anthropological sounding title is a riposte to Jean Genet's Les Nègres, clownerie (The Negros, the clown show) .
The
settlers, no longer pioneers but oppressors, and the nomadic Africans are joined by an American journalist (Elliot
Cowan) and, separately, Tshembe (Danny Sapani) who, on the death of his father, has returned to his homeland
from London where he has studied at university and taken part in an
independence movement.
An
unfinished play, it's first performance was in 1970, five years' after the writer's death, and, while it has an epic
sweep, the patchwork is somewhat roughly stitched and, for us, the joins do show.
So it's an uneven piece, with a rather conventional first act bringing in a recognizable structure, both covering colonialism and the history of literature. There are touches of Henrik Ibsen, George Bernard Shaw and Eugene O'Neill.
Nevertheless, the staging by South African director Yaël Farber with designer Soutra Gilmour, using the full resources of the
Olivier stage, brings another dimension.
Recently there has been a fad for
revolving stages in traditional theatres which, to be honest, has irritated the
hell out of TLT and her own bush companion. But
we've never quite clarified to ourselves exactly why until we saw the apt use
on the huge - and we mean huge - Olivier stage. Other theatres are just far too
small to do full justice to a revolve and allow the audience clear sightlines.
Here
it works to spectacular effect, giving a full HD treatment to a vast symbolic
African horizon with its changing light and seasons. The onion
layered revolve blows up the dust from the arid ground while the tall, stooping, skeletal African figure of "The
Woman" (Sheila Atim) lopes across the vista.
The play itself has a kickback in the second act which takes it away from the neater dichotomies before the interval.
Throughout there
are also glimpses of an intricate, shifting structure, still in progress, encompassing the history of
America and its relationship to colonialism as well as a history of Africa and European exploitation.
Yet the major strand of the mixed race child Eric (Tunji Kasim) feels undeveloped - or maybe, more accurately, truncated - if still vital.
This production blew TLT and her jalopy away with its unforgettable staging and the soundscape from the Ngqoko singers (music director Joyce Moholoagae) .
But it also left us with major thorny questions, principally about the author's intent, thrown up by the history of this play and the place of it within the National Theatre's season. At the same time, TLT, as an audience member "in the moment", cannot deny the undoubted power of this production with all its visceral qualities. A green light.
No comments:
Post a Comment