It got great reviews, so I was expecting great things. But my reaction was mixed. A very strong cast - it almost seems silly to mention the cast since Toronto area companies always have great casts these days - but an odd play. The setting was great - a nice forest edge, where the characters gathered to talk to the audience. the effect was rather tlike having someone read a long, fluid poem. The language was smooth and rythmic, so much so that I had a hard time not falling asleep in the middle. But the plot was almost non-existent - each character had a perspective to present, but vey little interaction with each other. So we had to listen to the outsiders who have lost their dogs, use this as a metaphor for their loss of a place in society.
A couple of things were quite jarring - especially the final statement by Spencer that he had killed Lily not because he feared she was a dog or a monster, but because she was a woman. This came out of nowhere and felt like a gratuitous nod to Nightwood as a feminist theatre. Not a good nod either! Taylor Trowbridge and Tamara Podemski gave particularly strong performances.
Borringg!
ReplyDeleteA play that has the characters declaiming alternately all the way through has to build either an argument or a rhythm; this did neither.
It was a waste of a good cast.