SUPERBLY FOCUSED PERFORMANCES AND PRODUCTION ELEMENTS

John Smythe, http://www.theatreview.org.nz

Despite the two and a quarter hours running time with no interval and the appallingly cramped seating there is much to commend in this Polish tribute to a 1968 Italian film.

As a prologue to the play proper, the man we will come to know as the father, Paolo (Jan Englert), takes questions from ‘the audience’ (nice work for three Wellington actors). Thus he opines that society is doomed because everyone is conforming to the global standards of capitalism, public television is imposing images controlled by demagogues, the church is a product of necessity and the notion of consolation is meaningless. He defends his life’s work as a manufacturer, and the wealth that has brought him. And when asked if he believes in God, he replies, thrice: “I don’t understand the question.”

Towards the end of the play, vox-pop projections canvass working class people on whether they believe in miracles, eliciting notions of what would constitute a miracle in their lives.

What plays out in the 120-odd minutes between may be seen as a “be careful what you wish for” cautionary tale. Faithfully replicating Pier Paolo Pasolini’s 1968 art movie Teorama (Theorem) – except for the long blackouts between scenes, which an ingenious director could surely eliminate – T.E.O.R.E.M.A.T. (the Polish word for theorem) reveals what happens when a random factor is dropped into the complacent upper middleclass equation.

Subsequent films that have explored similar themes include Six Degrees of Separation (a stranger invades the self-satisfied lives of well-to-do people and changes them forever) and Being There (people project their wants, needs and beliefs on a ‘blank canvas’ and revere him in the process).

Operating on the ‘doing it in slo-mo makes it art’ principle, the emptiness of this family’s daily life is depicted through three iterations: as Paolo works alone at his correspondence, Lucia, his wife, (Danuta Stenka) meticulously applies her make-up; Odetta, his daughter (Katarzyna Warnke), brushes her hair/ takes photos/ shows father her album; Pietro, his son (Jan Dravnel) brushes his hair/ studies from a book and presents something he has written to his father who wordlessly corrects it/ presents a corrected version to his father and, getting no response at all, assumes he has won approval. Emilia, the maid (Lidia Schneider), brings coffee and is generally taken for granted.

As in The Letter Writer, there is also a comic postman, Angiolino (Rafał Maćkowiak) who pines for Odetta and is teased somewhat by her, but of course he is not suitable. It is Angiolino who delivers the telegram to the family breakfast table: “Arriving tomorrow.”

Rather than watch how each member of the household waits for their respective ‘Godot’, we are treated to what happens when he, the unnamed Visitor (Sebastian Pawlak), becomes a guest in their home. (I could insert a spoiler warning here but it is not so much what happens as how it is done, theatrically, that offers the observer most value.)

Emilia is the first to demand his attention then his body, having masked her religious icon from the spectacle. Sharing a room with him, Pietro discovers his gayness. Lucia liberates her repressed sexual desires in a scene where cigarettes, smoke and wine glasses are used most creatively.

But while the Visitor obliges them all, usually after ensuring this is really what they want, it is he who makes the first move on Odetta. And she responds. Although she has told Angilino men don’t interest her, and has objectified the Visitor by photographing him – both hiding behind and probing with her lens (her album, incidentally, is full of male portraits) – she too finds her passions ignited by him.

Paolo has seen his son in bed with the Visitor and been shocked, not so much on moral grounds as at his realisation that intimacy has disappeared from his own life. He uses the Visitor to kick a ball about with, which I suspect is something he never had time to do with Pietro.

The clarity of all these stagings – in Magdalena Maciejewska’s vast bare plywood box set, superbly lit by Jacqueline Sobiszewski and accompanied or interleaved with music of the era (Jacek Grudzień & Piotr Domiński) – is vivid and compelling with its attention to detail, presenting this severly judged family and their world precisely as Pasolini and now this director/ scriptwriter, Grzegorz Jarzyna, want us to see it.

A new telegram, announcing “I’m leaving tomorrow,” provokes a speeche (in Polish with easy-to-read surtitles on the rear wall of the set) from each family member, to or about the Visitor. Paolo claims he has come to destroy and annihilate: “What do you want from me? You don’t exist and never did!” – which could refer to him as a person (being a figment of their collective imaginations) or the values and lifestyle choices he represents. Or both.

Odetta gets into some Freudian self-analysis: having used him to replace her father, who will now replace him? Pietro credits him with making him different from all the others. Lucia realises nothing really interests her; she lives a life of emptiness: “I would have withered without you; now whither will you drive me?” And Emilia packs her bag and leaves.

So, does the experience empower each of them to take personal responsibility for making their lives more fulfilling? Well no. They each disintegrate in their own way: Odetta becomes catatonic; Lucia becomes a nymphomaniac and gets gang raped for her troubles (because that’s how male writers tend to punish female characters who claim the freedom men routinely enjoy); Pietro tries to become an artist and goes mad; Paolo gives away his wealth and business to his employees, offers a primal scream to the bright light, and ends up naked and trembling in the foetal position.

Emilia sits out the seasons on a very long and ornate sofa (God’s waiting room?) and is visited by a child who takes away her baggage then sits beside her. One interpretation of the Pasolini film suggests she performs a miracle (which fits with the vox-pops on the topic) but I don’t get that here, unless it was her leaving that really caused the idle rich to self-destruct, and that is considered a miracle.

There’s a memorable film sequence involving birds landing on telegraph wires above the long sofa, as postman Angiolino dances a birdlike courtship of Emelia, until her squawk frightens him and all the other birds away.

The final beat, after what has felt like many endings, involves a long speech from Angiolino about – and in itself reflecting – the interminable, unchanging, repetitive monotony of the desert, which at least explains why the carpet is the colour of desert sand.

“The oneness of the desert does not let us sleep and does not let us wake,” he concludes. But the play’s end at last lets us articulate our atrophied joints and allow circulation to relieve the numbness caused by that unforgivably atrocious seating.

In retrospect, T.E.O.R.E.M.A.T’s superbly focused performances and production elements remind us that the lifestyle depicted is not one to aspire, and leave strong images burned onto our retinas.