Thursday, May 30, 2013

FAR AWAY and SEAGULLS at the CITIZENS THEATRE



This review from The Guardian captures the mood and spirit of the two plays so well it is worth quoting in full.

"If you didn't know better, you could think this evening was a single dose of the dazzlingly original Caryl Churchill rather than a double bill. When Seagulls begins, you're still trying to process the curious juxtapositions of Far Away as it switches back and forth from a remote farmhouse to a hat-making workshop. It wouldn't be too great a stretch to imagine that the second play, about a woman with fading telekinetic powers, was somehow related.

If they were related, the common theme would be the place of art in a barbaric world. In Far Away (first seen in 2000), Joan is the new girl at a milliner's who turns out to be a "hat genius". Only gradually does she realise that most of her creations will be destroyed. "You make beauty and it disappears," says her workmate, in awe of the ephemerality of art.

Their labours seem more futile still – and the role of art more precious – when contrasted with the farmhouse where a woman covers up her husband's people-trafficking operation. This innocuous kitchen is a front for the industrial movement of human beings, an idea designer Neil Haynes conveys by loading his set into shipping containers. In Dominic Hill's exquisite production, we see a great mechanical shifting of corrugated metal, accompanied by Scott Twynholm's grinding score, as the scene changes become part of the action.

Churchill's asymmetrical structure amplifies our uneasiness about a world that is not as "far away" as we would like to think. The similar uneasiness in Seagulls (first seen in 1990) is in the possibility that the authorities will hijack the psychic powers of Valery Blair for military ends. Like an artist, she is only as good as her last performance; as the pressure to please becomes debilitating, she yearns for simpler times. It makes for a fascinating, troubling evening."
In the video below the director of the production Dominic Hill discusses the plays and their meaning.

 

To the newer audience the plays could come across as a lazy mimicry of Beckett and Pinter , verging from absurdity for absurdity's sake to downright taking the piss out of the audience , that seems to be what two members of the audience who left at the interval never to return seemed to suggest in their uncomfortable vibes.They seem to miss the point that the plays are a challenge for them to think and reflect for themselves rather than have spoonfuls of ready made meals stuffed into them in small contract-industry sized morsels.

In 2009 Caryl Churchill was victim of a surreal campaign from ideological charged Zionist apologists for a fairly innocuous short play reflecting on Israels bombing of Gaza which left over 1400 mostly civilians  and innocent Children dead.The whole sorry pantomime of the absurd attacks came from those who were drunk on the noxious fumes of a colonial ideology which made them , at best, do moral gymnastics of their own consciences or to call all those who have a concern and regard to the wrongful slaying of innocent Palestinians ( and the bombing of two charity run Catholic Hospitals) by the Israelis as tarred with the brush of anti-semetism 

You can judge for yourself in the performance in the play below:



This comment from the video uploader sums things up nicely:

"Here we go again, the Antisemitic excuse again. Judaisim is NOT equal to Israel, and criticising Israel DOES NOT constitute antisemitism... that what Zionist wish to make it, but the fact remains... WE HAVE THE FREEDOM to criticize a regime, regardless who runs it !"

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

THE AGONY AND ECSTACY OF STEVE JOBS at the TRON


                                                     " I will never be the same
                                                       After seeing that show. "
                                                              Steve Wozniak , Apple Co-Founder
                                                              To the New York Times

This show caused a lot of controversy when first coming out , the criticism was not about the substance of the content , rather semantics about how the scenarios in the performance were actual primary sources sightings by the author himself or a representation of attested evidence being presented in a hard-hitting format which translates the gravity of the issues to a theatre audience.

This piece from corporate business journalists conveys a sense of the objections from those that prioritise share price and the image of stock listed companies and those who they use as cheap sources of labour.More focused on fuelling complexities and less on addressing correctable wrongs



The comment from "infocus" clarifies the topic somewhat and why the objections of the above piece are more smokescreen and less outrage at poor reportage.
      
"Interesting bit from Rob Schmitz, Marketplace's China correspondent in Shanghai:
"What makes this a little complicated is that the things Daisey lied about seeing are things that have ACTUALLY HAPPENED in China: Workers making Apple products have been poisoned by Hexane. Apple’s own audits show the company has caught underage workers at a handful of its suppliers. These things are rare, but together, they form an easy-to-understand narrative..." (All-caps are mine.)"
The real issue of the play , and therefore the real question is not whether an emerging economy like China uses practices that are less labour-friendly than those of which a Company like Apple would apply to Workers in the US , it is did Apple know about these practices , all attestable  and reported in the public domain and if they did why did they not do enough to make sure that they did not happen on assembly lines making Apple products.

This interview of the writer Mike Daisey gives an indication of the kind of reaction one should expect from any company that values and is not shy to embrace "ethical" values and corporate responsibility statements.( The last two minutes is especially profound in how big institutions have to respond to Human Rights for its employees and users).Identifying that old style colonialism has been replaced by modern economic colonialism is a piercing conclusion.

             

And you can see the whole play in the link below , a very commendable choice for a college play that bodes well for the future concerns of the next generation of workers.

                              
        
                                           

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

WEANS - HAMZAH IS 18 TODAY

Hamza was born at 9-05am eighteen years ago , the perfect combination of just in time for breakfast , but too late for school , and having all kinds of histrionics trying untying himself from the umbilical cord which he had somehow winded around himself and got into a half-nelson quasi lotus position.

Since then he has caught up well , perfected the art of late come-backs , never seen Celtic lose , including games against AC Milan;Manchester United; Benfica ; Barcelona and Shaktar and is passing his exams with flying colours.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

THE PRICE OF EVERYTHING at the TRON


Daniel Bye gives a performance lecture about value , not to be confused with a play or even a comedy routine. The show provides everyone in the audience a pint of milk and also compares the value of the arts in terms of cost , we all pay about 17p to support the arts , but they generate over twice that to the economy.Which means in financial terms alone the Arts make good economic investment sense.

According the the review in The Herald

"Bye is an engagingly down to earth and self-deprecatory raconteur, but make no mistake – these are revolutionary ideas he's advocating in the friendliest way imaginable. They're ideas too which a lot more people are looking to as capitalism looks increasingly untenable."
Alas the show is more absurd than radical , informative in a teasing unconnected way , in a superficial "made up shit" manner that dissipates the meaning in the message and concludes in a vacuous appeal to be kind to random strangers."What could possibly be edifying about sitting listening to me lying about capitalism"is a fitting synopsis from Daniel himself about the show and how he himself takes the edge out of a valid hard-hitting lesson.

You can see a potted version of his show in the video below: