This review appeared in an edited form on artsHub.
A sharp triangular
fragment of a room – a lounge room, a roaring fire, a couch, armchair. To one
side, a desk stuffed with papers and a typewriter. A spiral staircase winding through
the ceiling; a book-lined room off the side. This is the world of author
Patricia Highsmith as envisaged in Sydney
Theatre Company’s production of Switzerland,
a new play by Joanna
Murray-Smith originally commissioned by Geffen Playhouse
in Los Angeles .
Here, on a set purportedly based on Highsmith’s home in Switzerland , it is always dark
outside, while inside all manner of murderous deeds are concocted alongside plots
for future novels. Featuring many nods to her body of work, as well as drawing
upon the rich connotations and associations of the genre and period itself, Switzerland sees Highsmith – the author
of the Tom Ripley novels
as well as Strangers on a
Train and The Two Faces of
January – becoming the subject of an enthralling two-hander
stage-thriller set late in her life.