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Michel Tremblay is best
known as a political playwright. His 1965 play Les Belles Soeurs, revolutionized
Canadian theatre. Written in joual, the Quebequoise working class vernacular, the play
dramatized the lives of proletarian women in Montreal. The combination of language,
unsentimental characterization, and political content was electric. It sparked public
debate and inspired a generation of writers. Les Belles Soeurs is commonly
regarded as "the single most important event in the history of Quebec theatre,"
(according to the production notes). Tremblay's separatist politics and preference for
portraying characters at the edge of society established his reputation as Canadas
most important dramatist. Since then he has gone on to write dozens of plays, several
screenplays, some novels, film scripts, and even an opera (Nelligan, based on the
life of the Quebec poet).
The first Irish production of Tremblays work turns out to be a
most unusual choice. For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again is a tender, touching,
and funny play exploring the relationship between author and his mother. It is a loving
and very beautiful homage to the woman he credits for his artistic and personal
inspiration. Though written with attention to detail in language and due care in the
development of theme and character, the overall impression it makes is of a warm
reminiscence. This is a far cry from what you would expect upon reading the mans
resume.
Des Cave (Barbaric
Comedies) portrays Tremblay, narrator and participant in this story of his own
life. Maria McDermottroe is his mother. In many senses, as the narrator points out in his
opening address, she's an everywoman that all will recognize: "Youve seen her
before, on stage, in the audience, in the street," we are told. Yet she is also very
much a woman of her time and place. She is rooted in an identifiable experience of life
(post-war Montreal) which is related to us through a series of vignettes that take place
throughout the authors life from age ten to twenty one (he wrote Les Belles
Soeurs when he was twenty-three).
Each moment has an individual theme insofar as each defines a moment in
the childs life in a way which may not be immediately obvious. He learns the meaning
of values such as honesty, courage, and loyalty, though usually at the end of a stern
tongue lashing laced with doses of matriarchal guilt-tripping and sly humor. Each scene is
heavily anecdotal, both in itself and insofar as the bulk of the dialogue is spoken by the
mother, who has a tendency to exaggerate and tell stories which are mostly apocryphal or
at least theatrical. Tremblay draws attention to the truths beneath the hyperbole though,
and demonstrates how he learned all he knows about life and its representation from this
woman.
It is a clever and engaging piece of writing which integrates form and
discourse. It is as much a study of what the theatre means to Tremblay as how his mother
inspired his life and work. He makes this explicit from the outset, beginning with the
narrators opening tirade about the conventions of theatrical narrative and
concluding with a moment in which representation takes on a whole new meaning
as the play shifts from realism to wish-fulfillment without jarring the audience.
Throughout the play, mother and son discuss writing, acting,
storytelling, verisimilitude and characterization all amid supposedly
innocuous conversations about relatives, dinner parties, school recitals, and
favorite books. It is little wonder that this child grew up to be a playwright. It is, in
the end, a fitting and very appropriate homage to the authors mother which perfectly
complements his more contentious and didactic work. It explores and explains how he came
to see the world in the way he did and honors the woman who ultimately (arguably
indirectly) helped him to realize his dreams.
For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again is also a very moving and
deeply personal work of theatre. Its depiction of the mother-son relationship is universal
enough to speak to almost any audience, although it is also a truly beautiful tribute to
this particular woman. The machinations of a long-suffering but deeply loving mother
transcend national and linguistic barriers though, and frequently inspire peals of
laughter and, eventually, tears. There may be a limit to just how much patience some
people will have with all of the storytelling, but nothing that happens on stage
doest belong there on deeper structural and thematic levels.
Cave and McDermottroe work well together, although their accents are a
peculiar mishmash of Canadian and Irish. It doesnt really matter, but inevitably
something of Tremblays theatre has been lost in translation in the first place, then
lost again in performance abroad. McDermottroe carries most of the weight of the piece,
but the interplay between the two actors is very well timed, bringing the play to life on
human terms and preventing it from seeming like a collection of punctuated monologues.
Director Gordon McCall makes good use of the stage space and few props to keep the action
fluid, and designer Paul McCauleys subtly surrealist set (with a mirror hanging
eerily in space and two doorways framed by an interlocking wave pattern rather than
straight lines) establishes sense of the environment which reinforces the impression that
this is not objective reality in the first place.
Dublin, February 13, 2002 - Harvey O'Brien