Often cited as the
world’s longest love-letter, Virginia Woolf’s novel Orlando
is a fictional biography of Orlando, an Elizabethan youth who wins the favour
of Queen Elizabeth I, and through good fortune and a dash of incredulity, lives
across centuries, barely ageing a day in the process; following a sex-change in
Constantinople, she (“for there can be no doubt about her sex”) returns to
England a woman, only to find the deck of cards is stacked against her time and
again, until Woolf’s novel finishes in “the present age” (i.e. 1928), when
Orlando is well over three-hundred years old (yet looks little more than thirty
six). Adapted for the stage by Sarah Ruhl, Sydney Theatre Company’s production
of Orlando
is directed by Sarah
Goodes, and although full of colour and energy, it is perhaps hampered
somewhat by a text which contains perhaps too much of Woolf’s own text and not
enough of the playwright’s own dramaturgical landscaping to make it a truly
effective piece of theatre.
Set upon a black
stage with a double revolve set into the floor, Renée
Mulder’s design features many whimsical moments of stagecraft, and several
echoes of ideas from productions seen across Sydney in the past four years.
Characters and simple items of set – a banquet table, a lounge, an oak tree, a
swing – appear on the outer revolve and disappear as quickly as they came,
while two gold staircases stand in the middle, pivoting like clock-hands,
opening and closing to echo the passing of time, of Orlando’s ‘lives’, of love.
Mulder’s costumes
for Orlando are
sumptuous in their detail – from ruby-red Elizabethan doublet and pantaloons,
to a gold brocade coat, an emerald green gown, a deep-purple dress and corset,
and the looser flannel slacks and shirt of Woolf’s own time. Set against
Orlando’s own Technicolored wardrobe, the Greek-style chorus are clothed in
contemporary everyday clothes – chinos, shirts, cardigans – and expertly
transform into queens, courtiers, lovers, archduchesses (and archdukes), actors,
and simple folk with the help of a simple prop or item of clothing, like a
scarf. Like male and female, light and dark, the two styles work together
effortlessly to create a poetic world, a gestural space where gender is
meaningless, and where the self is the only constant. To complement Mulder’s
richly textured world, Damien Cooper’s lighting is clear and crisp, picking out
characters in spotlights, creating several memorable poetic images, and lends
the production a dream-like quality. Alan John’s score – a pastiche of
styles from across five centuries – effortlessly keeps Orlando’s life moving,
and imbues Goodes’ production with a dynamism and energy which complements the
use of the revolve.
Goodes’ cast of
six are full of an energy and verve which keeps the production moving,
maintains our interest in the adventures of Woolf’s eponymous hero/ine. Jacqueline
McKenzie’s Orlando is full of a youthful energy and vibrancy, and bursts
forth upon the stage like a red bouncy ball, and never stops moving until she
hits the twentieth (or perhaps twenty-first) century. There is something of
David Bowie’s many personas in her Orlando ,
although it could just be her hair, and the glorious androgyny with which she
plays the role. John Gaden seems born to play Queen Elizabeth I, and looks
equally regal and slightly-ridiculous in a vibrant pink gown; as with every one
of his performances, his skill at making the text sing is on display here, and
his deft transition between Queen, chorus, street folk and housekeepers is
wonderful to behold. Matthew
Backer’s Marmaduke is resplendent in a plum-coloured coat and waistcoat,
every inch Orlando ’s
equal, and he brings a compelling dignity to his brief glimpse of Desdemona.
Anthony Taufa brings a wide-eyed ostentation to his poet, a harrowing remorse
to his Othello, and a chameleon’s skill at switching between several smaller
characters in the chorus. Garth Holcombe’s Archduchess seems perhaps too
frivolous for the play’s context, but his Archduke is more subtly calibrated, and
exemplifies everything Orlando (by then a woman) is up against in her life –
the societal favouring of men over women, and the almost impossible task of
carving your own niche in the face of it. Luisa Hastings Edge’s Sasha is
resplendent in a fur coat, hat, and shimmering tights, and has a melancholic
edge to her girlishness which cuts against Orlando’s energy and wide-eyed
optimism; her brief moments ice-skating with McKenzie’s Orlando are sweet, and
even though some might consider them saccharine or jarring against the flow of
the rest of the production, there’s a tenderness to them which highlights the
blushes of youthful love, the giddy drowning of yourself in another person, and
the whole-bodied feeling of being in love with someone.
If there is one criticism
with this production, it lies in Ruhl’s play, in the text – in the adaptation –
itself. In strictly adhering to Woolf’s own language, structure, and style,
Ruhl has not quite exerted the full amount of force required to take the novel
from the page to the stage, and keep Woolf’s intellectual and often witty
arguments intact. By itself, the play is crystalline, a crisp and sparkling
addition to Ruhl’s already beguiling oeuvre, and reads very much like any of
her other plays – the dialogue and stage directions are almost poetic,
fragmentary, abstractions of thoughts or ideas. And while in her other plays it
might work, here in Orlando it feels
too light, as though it only glides across the surface of Woolf’s love
letter-cum-novel, rather than exploring the bewitching darkness and occasional
melancholy of a three-hundred year old life.
To her credit,
Goodes seeks to redress this in her production, and does so with a lightness
and a play-fullness which seeks to illuminate the exquisite thrill of a life lived
across several centuries. With Mulder’s help, she achieves Woolf’s darkness
in the set’s walls and floor, time’s abyss surrounding Orlando , swallowing everything s/he loves as
s/he passes through it from one century to the next. Like Woolf in her novel,
Ruhl’s chorus act as cheeky biographers to this extraordinary life, and Goodes
moves them around and through the space with the skill of a choreographer,
ushering one moment in one door while seeing another out, and they become
almost Shakespearean in their function as stage managers to Orlando’s life,
interjecting at crucial times and facilitating changes in time, place,
location, century…
At the heart of
Woolf’s novel is the tension between the individual and the unbending
constraints of a society’s rules, and in particular the fate of women in the
eyes of the law. This is conveyed halfway through the play when Orlando returns
to England from Constantinople as a woman; “she was now a victim of two major
law suits: (1) that you are now dead, and therefore cannot hold any property
whatsoever; (2) that you are a woman, which amounts to much the same thing.”
While Ruhl races through this moment in favour of the comic retort of someone
having just changed sex, century, and country, Goodes underplays the moment,
and we see in this brief exchange how far we haven’t come in the eighty-seven
years since Woolf wrote her novel.
And herein lies
the power of Goodes’ production – by utilising a relatively sparse staging
(albeit a richly costumed one), she allows Woolf’s words to breathe, allows the
poetic space between Ruhl’s adaptation and the reality of
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