One Unified Global Perspective
Communications with a Global Perspective
Home
Intro
Contact Us
Voice over IP
PBX Solutions
Services
Support
Glossary
Open Source
Blog
Forum

WebMail





2007 Sep 01 - Sat

The Royal Gazette's Review of Sisterhood

Here is what Jennifer Hind of the Royal Gazette had to say of opening night for the Sisterhood:

Black and white with a touch of colour/classy and classic/heartless and cold?

Getting the balance right is one of the themes of this modern translation and reinterpretation of the classic 17th century Les Femmes Savantes by Moliere. The Sisterhood, R.R. Bolt's 1980s take on this comedy of manners and motives, explores sibling rivalry, the battle of the sexes and the conflict between intellectual snobbery and personal integrity at a cracking pace in rhyming couplets, replete with clever puns, irony, witty repartee and physical comedy.

It is also marvellously self-aware, with one character suggesting all the books should be burned . save the collection of Moliere as they must be worth a fortune.

The current production at the Daylesford Theatre, directed by Suzann McLean and produced by Jo Shane, is a clever realisation of a very clever play and well worth the price of admission.

Sisters Armande and Henriette are like chalk and cheese, with Armande seeking maternal approval through the parroting of her mother's and aunt's intellectual pretensions and aggressive feminism, while Henriette declares herself more interested in the sensory world than the world of the intellect.

The rivalry of these siblings, 'marriage is slavery' versus 'sex is better than speculative thought', is compounded by the fact that the poor but charming Clitandre, spurned by a scornful Armande, finds a warm welcome in the arms of Henriette. The young lovers' relationship is supported by Henriette's sympathetic but ineffective father, while her domineering mother has other plans for her daughter: marriage to a poet of dubious ability and large ambition. The parental battle of the sexes is spiced with a liberal sprinkling of a saucy maid, a lascivious aunt and a disloyal pal.

How the happy ending is contrived with a little help from their friends, involves a clever twist and a surprising revelation.

Very little, if anything, has been left to chance in this production. Even the music between the scenes, such as Madonna's 'Material Girl', and Hall and Oates' 'Maneater', have been carefully chosen to underscore the themes of the play. The scene is set with a black and white décor, carefully styled but unnatural, closed off from the colourful world of nature by a pair of French doors. The black and white theme is carried over to the costumes, with one exception: the flamboyant Trissotin appears as a Technicolor Boy George.

Enhancing the witty lines is a lot of delicious stage business . my favourite being the 'musical chairs' on the sofa in the second act. But even the manner in which Chrysale deals with the 'meaty matters' concerning the very down-to-earth Martine and the solving of the Rubik's cube puzzle show the deft hand of a thoughtful director.

There are generally strong performances from the cast, and the few pauses and flubbed lines could be put down to first-night nerves. That the play's rhyming couplets are never intrusive and even sound almost natural attests to the competence with which they are delivered. I am reluctant to single out individual performances, as all the acting was solid, with even the minor characters making striking impact.

I came away thoroughly amused and anxious to dust off the Hits of the 80s album buried at the back of my CD collection.

The play runs until September 8, with no performances on September 2 or September 3. Tickets ($25) are available from the BMDS box office 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. on performance nights.



Blog Content ©2009
Ray Burkholder
All Rights Reserved
ray@oneunified.net
(441) 505 7293
Available for Contract Work
Resume

RSS: Click to see the XML version of this web page.

twitter
View Ray 
Burkholder's profile on LinkedIn
technorati
Add to Technorati Favorites



September
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
            1
           


Main Links:
Monitoring Server
SSH Tools
QuantDeveloper Code

Special Links:
Frink

Blog Links:
Sergey Solyanik
Marc Andreessen
HotGigs
Micro Persuasion
... Reasonable ...
Chris Donnan
BeyondVC
lifehacker
Trader Mike
Ticker Sense
HeadRush
TraderFeed
Stock Bandit
The Daily WTF
Guy Kawaski
J. Brant Arseneau
Steve Pavlina
Matt Cutts
Kevin Scaldeferri
Joel On Software
Quant Recruiter
Blosxom User Group
Wesner Moise
Julian Dunn
Steve Yegge
Max Dama

2007
Months
Sep




Mason HQ

Disclaimer: This site may include market analysis. All ideas, opinions, and/or forecasts, expressed or implied herein, are for informational purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation to invest, trade, and/or speculate in the markets. Any investments, trades, and/or speculations made in light of the ideas, opinions, and/or forecasts, expressed or implied herein, are committed at your own risk, financial or otherwise.