People disappear all the time. Ask any policeman. Better yet, ask a journalist… Many of the lost will be found, eventually, dead or alive. Disappearances, after all, have explanations. Usually.
– Diana Gabaldon, Cross Stitch
Since it first
appeared in Joan Lindsay’s 1967 novel, the story of Picnic at Hanging Rock
has been seared into our cultural conscience. Following Malthouse’s
production earlier in the year – an adaptation of Lindsay’s novel, rather
than of Peter Weir’s film – Sarah
Goodes brings us Angela
Betzien’s The
Hanging, a contemporary take on the missing child story that has
haunted us since the earliest days of white settlement. You can see it in the
paintings of Frederick
McCubbin, the claustrophobic vision of the untamed bush all around us, the
impossibly high horizons and tiniest glimmers of sky too far away; you can see
it in Picnic at Hanging Rock, Top of the Lake,
and The Kettering
Incident; in Hilary Bell’s Wolf
Lullaby and The
Splinter, in Jasper
Jones, When The Rain Stops Falling;
in the disappearances of the Beaumont children, Azaria Chamberlain and, more
recently, Madeleine McCann. And while these events are in no way connected,
they each capture our imaginations, and fuel our insecurities about possession,
sexuality, colonialism, and our (lack of) control over nature.
Betzien’s play
follows her recent plays Mortido
and The Dark Room in the
crime genre, and Children of the Black Skirt
in her exploration of the Australian Gothic trope, and manages to combine the
two genres within the frame of a crime thriller which owes several obvious
debts to Picnic at Hanging Rock, as
well as The
Virgin Suicides, Heavenly Creatures, The
Secret History, and The
Catcher in the Rye. These nods do not detract from the story, nor the
revelations and their ramifications, but act as a series of refracting mirrors,
to bounce ideas and references off each other to create a new work that ripples
with secrets, latent sexuality and its potency, as well as capitalising on the
eeriness and terror of the Australian bush that has haunted our national psyche
for centuries.
Betzien’s The Hanging is the story of a fourteen
year old girl, Iris, who returned from the bush without the two friends she
disappeared with six days ago. Interviewing her is Detective Sergeant Flint, a
specialist in missing persons cases pertaining to children. Not wanting to talk
to the detective, Iris nominates her English teacher, Ms Corrossi, as her
support person, and soon a perplexing web of secrets, lies, half-truths,
shadows, and cover-ups is exposed along with their dangerous consequences.
A taut three-hander, Goodes’
production unfolds upon a little shard of a room, barely big enough for a desk,
two chairs, and a doorway, let alone three headstrong characters who oppose and
mirror each other in surprising ways. Bisecting this tiny room, is a high
sandstone wall, atop which the bush can be seen looming, silent, dark, brooding,
waiting to swallow us up. Designer Elizabeth Gadsby has created a world which
straddles the intersection between the real and the imagined, the common and
the private, and uncovers the menace and vulnerabilities that haunt both the
physical and mental worlds of these three characters. Nicholas Rayment’s
lighting creates interrogational brightness and crepuscular gloom in equal
measure, and the subtle modulation of both focuses our attention but also lets
our imaginations run wild with ‘what ifs’ and ‘what happeneds’ right up until
the final moments. Steve Francis’ sound design uses the sounds of the bush to
create an enveloping menace which barely intrudes but never subsides; like the
bush, it is always present, even if we are not looking at it or anywhere near
it; it is still there. Francis’ brief pockets of music serve to craft the
tension and the mood, and add menace and an eldritch foreboding which slips
under your skin and doesn’t let go too easily. David Bergman’s video
projections are perhaps the most direct visual nod to Weir's Picnic at Hanging Rock,
as the three girls are seen wandering through the bush, their dresses and long
hair drifting in a vaguely Pre Raphaelite manner; and while you could say these
sequences are unnecessary – perhaps all that is needed is the bush itself,
unmediated, and the birds to give us the sense of what happened – there is
something unsettling about watching the girls get swallowed up by the bigness
of the bush, and it brings Iris and Ms Corrossi’s fears to bear in chilling
detail.
Ashleigh Cummings’ Iris is in
one sense a naïve fourteen year old, but she is also discovering the power of
her youth and sexuality, the power secrets and fragments of truth can have over
others, people much older than her, and she relishes this. While Cummings seems
at times too old for her fourteen-year-old character, she slips into Iris’
privileged world and mindset with a disarming ease, and her performance shifts
and changes over the course of the play’s taut eighty minutes, and by the end of
it we are hanging on her every word as we realise Iris perhaps holds the
answers to the play’s conundrum.
Luke Carroll’s Detective Sergeant Flint is persistent and steely determined but never grandstands, and his restraint in some key scenes nicely undercuts the frustration and urgency of his enquiries and the story’s events. Like him, we are constantly parsing Iris and Ms Corrossi’s words to try to work out the true nature of what happened that day, what might have contributed to the girls’ disappearance, which – or whose – version of the truth is more ‘correct’.
Genevieve Lemon’s Ms Corrossi, the English teacher who unknowingly starts this devastating juggernaut on its unwavering course, is at first particularly passionate about language, but as the mood and power-balance in the interrogation room begins to shift, so too does Corrossi’s focus, and Lemon’s performance grows exponentially; by the conclusion she, like Flint, is at a loss as to what happened or how things might have been prevented or at least rectified. Underneath Corrossi’s prickly exterior is a warmth and generosity which the girls prey upon, a willingness that eventually has fatal consequences; yet, while Corrossi wields power as the teacher, it is her students who have a not-inconsiderable measure of power over her, and it is frightening and delicious in a single instance to see this played with by both Lemon and Cummings.
Luke Carroll’s Detective Sergeant Flint is persistent and steely determined but never grandstands, and his restraint in some key scenes nicely undercuts the frustration and urgency of his enquiries and the story’s events. Like him, we are constantly parsing Iris and Ms Corrossi’s words to try to work out the true nature of what happened that day, what might have contributed to the girls’ disappearance, which – or whose – version of the truth is more ‘correct’.
Genevieve Lemon’s Ms Corrossi, the English teacher who unknowingly starts this devastating juggernaut on its unwavering course, is at first particularly passionate about language, but as the mood and power-balance in the interrogation room begins to shift, so too does Corrossi’s focus, and Lemon’s performance grows exponentially; by the conclusion she, like Flint, is at a loss as to what happened or how things might have been prevented or at least rectified. Underneath Corrossi’s prickly exterior is a warmth and generosity which the girls prey upon, a willingness that eventually has fatal consequences; yet, while Corrossi wields power as the teacher, it is her students who have a not-inconsiderable measure of power over her, and it is frightening and delicious in a single instance to see this played with by both Lemon and Cummings.
This is a production – a play –
which is constructed like a series of concentric circles, like the solar
system, in that each character is a planet, and as the cosmic mechanism of the
play swings into motion, some move faster than others (Iris, particularly),
while others start off slowly only to gather pace as they begin to piece it
together (Ms Corrossi perhaps), and others occasionally synchronise their
orbits with others, locking onto the gravitational pull of one or more planets
and gaining a kind of clarity (Flint, and Ms Corrossi in equal measure). Like
Joanna Murray-Smith’s Switzerland
two years ago, which Goodes also directed (and is remounting at MTC in
a month’s time), there is a delicious cat-and-mouse game at play here, and
it is edge-of-your-seat stuff trying to keep up with the unraveling of secrets
and information, as Betzien drip-feeds us clues and snippets of truths; as
Lemon, Carroll, and Cummings enter into each others’ orbits in turn. And
although it is never really made explicitly clear, the date of Iris’
interrogation is crucial; being 19th February, if this is the sixth day
following the girls’ disappearance, it means they went into the bush on 14th –
St Valentine’s Day; the same day as that fateful day in 1900 that Joan
Lindsay’s schoolgirls supposedly disappeared on.
Part of the attraction and
indeed magneticism here is the way in which we want to know what happens – what
happened, rather – at the same time as not wanting to; the mystery is
everything. And I think this applies to Sarah Goodes’ work during her time as
Resident Director with Sydney Theatre Company. Having spent the last six years
directing new writing – in their world or Australian premiere productions –
Goodes’ work has matured and deepened, and it has been a privilege to watch it
grow and expand in front of our eyes. Starting rehearsals with a script which
may or may not stay relatively intact come opening night is something which
many directors would probably be apprehensive about. For Goodes it is “a chance
to develop a close relationship with a writer and to work with them in refining
the play for its first performance… The discoveries we make in the rehearsal
room and in conversations about the text evolve in an organic, collaborative
way that I find particularly exciting.” In short, the mystery of whether or not
a play will work is everything. It’s the ‘leap of faith’ that Goodes talked
about when I met her last year: “you don’t have a
sure thing on your hands that you can then do what you want with; it’s a huge
leap – if it’s going to work on stage, I don’t know – but that is the core of all
theatre; that should be the core of where everyone’s at on the first day of
rehearsal. ‘Is this going to work?’ ‘Who knows?’ It’s a leap of faith, and it’s
got to have that in it for the magic to happen.”
*
When Ralph
Myers directed Peter
Pan for Belvoir a few years ago, he said how J.M. Barrie’s play “could
secretly be a play about Australia – a world off on its own, full of oddities,
constantly trying to leave its past behind. Australia , like Peter, has a
wonderful and annoying determination never to grow up.” Part of me believes
this is why we are so fascinated by the ‘missing child’ trope in our national
art, literature, theatre, cinema; why stories like The Hanging keep being written. Our nation is the result of white
Eurocentric ideas forced upon an unfamiliar (and quite often unforgiving)
landscape, without a moment’s pause to consider the practicalities of our
actions, or their ramifications on its traditional custodians. Yet, as old as
the continent is, our nation is still quite young. There’s something harrowing
and chilling in the way Betzien’s character of Iris almost comes to stand in for
our country’s conscience – the fourteen-year-old girl, standing on the
precipice of adulthood – especially considering Diderot’s comment in a letter
to his young mistress, “You all die at 15.”
As in Lindsay’s
novel, Betzien’s script makes reference to the Rock dreaming in millions of
years, rather than decades or centuries like our own societal records. “In the
Rock’s terms, 1900 and 2016 are the same… It is hanging – in time, in space.”
In this sense, the Rock in both texts is a portal, a gateway, a liminal place –
to another
dimension perhaps, to another time, to sacred and spiritual places we can
barely fathom; it is also an emotional force, our emotional past from which we
cannot hide. By extension, in Betzien’s script as in Goodes’ production, the
Rock and bush could be read as metaphors for teenage sexuality – full of unseen
cracks and holes, deep dark secrets, mysterious energies and emotional forces
beyond our control. These references – while perhaps slightly too obvious when
you’re in the moment of the play – act as signposts, signifiers, mental
triggers that serve to
remind us just how truly unsettling and horrifying a story it is, how
uncontrollable and untamable the landscape is around us, how powerless we are
to comprehend it or stop it in any way.
*
As Goodes’ final production as a Resident Director at Sydney Theatre
Company, The Hanging is an incredibly
strong note to finish on. Betzien’s script is perhaps her strongest to date,
and Goodes’ direction is not only clear and gentle as we have come to expect
from her work, but it is incredibly strong and finely-tuned to the nuances of
Betzien’s script, the world of the play, as well as the maintaining of
suspense, thought, and action throughout, and this strength is mirrored in the
three central performances. There is a robust and thrilling mind at work here,
both in the writing and in the staging, and the production not only matches it
but extends it, amplifies it, until it fills the Wharf 1 theatre with all the
menace and power of the bush. It has been a pleasure watching Goodes’ work over
the past four years and certainly one of the joys of keeping this blog, and as
she takes up the position of Associate
Director at the Melbourne Theatre Company next year, you can be sure that
her future projects will be like Woolf’s Orlando – “filled with
life – exquisitely… bursting with it.”
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