That play was written by a man, based on a book by a man, directed by a man, and played by three male actors.
Grief is the Thing with Feathers, playing at the beautiful St Ann's Warehouse in Dumbo, shares these features:
based on the best seller written by Max Porter, it is staged by the inventive
Enda Walsh, and stars a man and two boys. But where the creators of the Lehman trilogy didn’t think the play
needed women to tell the story of a family, ‘Grief’ tells of the disappearance of one
woman as defining the whole story of that masculine family at that point in their life.
Cillian Murphy plays a father who loses his wife abruptly. He,
and his two young sons, are visited by Crow, which is also played by Murphy.
Crow is evil and elegant. Crow is witty and articulate, cruel and detached. A
black, hooded bathrobe turns Murphy into the mythical bird, and any evil
creature associated with fear, with loss, with death: demons, ogres, henchman
even. He is the one who imposes pain. As Crow, Murphy speaks with the literary
English accented voice of fairy tales turned wrong, of horror films. The
powerful male voice is further amplified, distorted until the beautiful text
becomes incomprehensible. The book, and the play, are based in part on a body of poems, The Crow, that Ted Hughes wrote after the
suicide of Sylvia Plath.
Murphy is the fascinating actor of the Internet series ‘PeakyBlinders’. With his square jaw and stunning blue eyes, glamor is in his range.
He leaves all that backstage as he turns into an Irish father, with an unflattering
hair style, unfashionable moustache, drab clothes. H portrays the fallibility of a
man, as a lover, as a husband, as a father. That requires modesty.
When the actor switches to being Crow, he recovers his potential for glamor, all brilliance, all aloofness from anything that ties humans down: emotions, fears, needs. His bird dance, trancelike, dazzles with its lightness, his delivery of the text seduces with its perfect articulation. He won the Irish Times award for this near one-man show in which streams of sweat literally jets out of his body from the physicality of the performance.
When the actor switches to being Crow, he recovers his potential for glamor, all brilliance, all aloofness from anything that ties humans down: emotions, fears, needs. His bird dance, trancelike, dazzles with its lightness, his delivery of the text seduces with its perfect articulation. He won the Irish Times award for this near one-man show in which streams of sweat literally jets out of his body from the physicality of the performance.
How can grief, that utterly internal experience, so huge, so
overwhelming, liquefying of the insides, be represented on stage which by
definition shows only the exterior of a human body? In part, in this case, by
projecting the pain onto the walls. They are scratched with the words, with
scribbled words, that turn to pure scribble, that paint the walls black. The whole
stage is plunged in darkness. Suddenly Crow is perched on the 2nd floor, light
strobes, throbs like sobs in the throat, like blood in the head. It’s
terrifying as it looks like Crow might try to fly, and he would crash, being only human.
The moment of terror, the father’s madness passes thanks to the cathartic experience. Back
to the mundane London apartment. The stage is mostly empty but for the bare necessities. A kitchen for food.
Bunk beds for the boys to sleep. The father does not have
a bed. A home movies is projected on the wall. Day trip to the beach. The
mother’s face. She’s just a woman. One woman. But we know that every trait of
her face, every expression is beloved by the three males in her life, who,
dwarfed by her image and her presence, watch her. Her projection becomes huge, encompasses
all three walls, the floor of the stage until it diffuses into the whole
theater and can’t be read anymore.
The power of women. And isn’t that what they are forever
being punished for by men? Girls as sisters, women as mothers, as life partners
to men, loom huge over the male emotional landscape with their psychological
powers, the power of their beauty, of their bodies, and at the same time, the power of their
frailty, the innocence of not knowing their own power. However much material submission
men impose on women, as they have done on other groups of human beings,
whether they lock them indoor, deny them education, property, respect, whether
they are beaten, the dependence of men’s happiness on women can never be reversed. In this play, the boys and their father's world turns to chaos and violence without the presence of the woman in their life.
The lights, the projections, the distorted voice turn the major
part of the play into a noisy experience that could have done with a bit more
modulation. In the end, the father recovers his sanity, is able to care for his
young, and Grief might turn back into "Hope that thing with feathers". In an
effective staging trick, the pantry that was empty because of the
father’s incapacitation, has miraculously refilled with cans and jars of food: sustenance has been
recovered.
written and published by Arabella von Arx
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