Sunday, 20 September 2015

Hecuba, Swan Theatre, 19th September 2015


Hecuba by Marina Carr

Swan Theatre, 19th September 2015

 

Hecuba had 18 children.  She wasn’t reduced by this; in fact her power as Queen of Troy was much enhanced by being the matriarch of a swelling dynasty.  I think about this as I wedge my belly into my high seat in the gallery.  It’s comfortable enough if I don’t move.  But unfortunately I have left my phone switched on in my handbag on the floor below my dangling feet.  I flip up my seat and climb onto the bars in front and wonder how to get down to my bag without putting my head in the lap of the lady next to me.  I manage to hook it up to me with my foot somehow but then, when I try and pull down my seat to sit on again, I do actually get wedged.  My mother shoves and pulls a bit and I am soon winched back up onto my seat.  Where I must remain for an hour and fifty minutes because there is to be no interval in this performance.  I think this is a modern parable about being pregnant.  I am a modern day Euripides!

The action begins.  Or rather, Hecuba, seated in her throne, the only piece of scenery on the stage throughout, begins to recount her version of events.  This is how the play is structured throughout.  Even though characters are on stage together, they are all recounting what happened as if separated by their own ‘stories’.  You might think the constant “he said”/”she said” would become annoying but in fact it gives a wonderful restraint to the play which could so quickly become an unfathomable blood bath.  Only in certain scenes do we seem to catch up with the drama and the recounting is replaced with direct drama, as when Polyxena is sacrificed.

The drama of this scene is almost overwhelming.  Carr’s script ensures that we understand the awfulness of Hecuba’s torture; she can endure but only just.  Over and over she asks how she can be living through such brutality and inhumanity.  Although death has existed from the moment the play opened, Polyxena is the first character to die on stage.  Agamemnon has to slit her throat twice and still she doesn’t die.  We are told she is finished off by a final stab into the heart.  It’s unbearable to watch.  Carr’s great challenge in re-working Euripides’ drama was to make a shocking and blood-thirsty play both shocking and blood-thirsty.  It is all too easy for audiences to switch off their emotions when assaulted with so much carnage and brutality, especially in an age where our contemporary dramas are comparatively so subtle.  Carr ensures that her play is relevant throughout.  Little Polydorus, played by the beguiling Luca Saraceni-Gunner, whose end is near tells Agamemnon that killing for the sake of killing is inhumane; even animals don’t do that.  And Hecuba herself states that this is not war, for war has rules; they are trying to wipe us out, this is genocide.  Contemporary echoes cannot be ignored.  By the end, everyone is mad and blind to the point of any of it.  The throne gets dragged round the stage, no one sure whose its rightful owner is.

The Greeks are played by black actors. This contrast of white women versus black men is tribal and effective.  As their king, Ray Fearon as Agamemnon, is incredibly powerful.  His
voice is rich and authoritative but Derbhle Crotty and her Irish venom is an ample match for him.  Their repartee is compelling and sexually charged.  In fact, I can’t tell you how good it is.  If Carr’s script gives words an extraordinary power then Erica Whyman, as director, has had unbelievable vision in bringing these actors together in the way she does.  Who would think that a subtle black humour could work in such a play?  And yet, with madness comes laughter.  The relief for the audience in those moments of humour was palpable; a light shone in the darkness.  When Agamemnon has been forced to sacrifice Polyxena in order to appease his men, who believe that a sacrifice will bring them the wind they need to sail home, he looks to the sky and notes in exasperation, “of course there is no fucking wind!” 

At the end of the play Polymestor stumbles on stage and tells Hecuba how a gang of Agamemnon’s men has gouged out his eyes and killed his two young sons.  Of course, in Euripides’ version, it is Hecuba herself who is responsible for these atrocities in revenge for Polymestor’s part in Polydorus’s murder.  Carr is quite right to give an alternative view.  Euripides wrote his drama some 700 years after the fall of Troy.  It seems certain that someone like Hecuba existed but the rest is myth.  I am happy to have been introduced to this particular Greek classic through a twentieth century lens.  Authenticity is not lost; arguably, it is gained.