‘FOR A CULTURE THAT'S SO RICH, WE DON'T HAVE ANYTHING TO OFFER PEOPLE WHO ARE GRIEVING'

Troy boy

Steve Cramer talks to director Gordon Anderson about the UK debut of young American writer Mark Schultz’s A BRIEF HISTORY OF HELEN OF TROY.

uppressed grief suffocates. it rages within the 5 breast. and is forced to multiply its strength.‘

So said ()vid. about 2000 years ago. It‘s strange at times to think just how much insight the ancients had into the human psyche. for the Roman poet's observations of repressed grief. and the catastrophic displacement and rechanneling that occurs as its result. might well be something straight from a contemporary book of pop psychology.

This most powerful emotion. and its link to the classics. is explored by US dramatist Mark Schultz. who. at a youngish 29. has broken through with considerable impact in New York with A Brie/History- och/rn of Troy. his first major work. In it. we meet a teenage girl who has recently lost her mother. The repression of her grief. in part created by an uncommunicative father who is obsessed with coverage of the current war in Iraq on the television news. leads her to an alarming crossroads. Perhaps not

so scary is her sudden obsession with the myth of

Helen of Troy. but her perverser related desire to become a porn star makes a terrible link to our consumer society.

Gordon Anderson. artistic director of ATC. who. in association with the Drum theatre. Plymouth. is bringing this major new work to the Traverse. joins the dots for me. ‘She‘s grieving the loss of her mother. and pursuing the idea of beauty. She wants to be loved. so she feels that if she‘s a porn star people will fantasise about her. and she‘ll be kind of loved. What‘s so interesting about this is she pursues a very rational line. which forces the audience to take a position. You can

deny that she'll be loved in the way that she wants to

be. but you can't deny her argument. I think it's part of

her world view. which says: “lfl can't get it I‘ll buy it. and if that doesn‘t work. I‘ll sell myself.”

And her particular interest in Helen of Troy displays the way in which psychological imbalance. often dismissed as a subjective condition. has some very exterior. and quite political sources. The girl‘s condition is linked to our own collective neurosis in contemporary capitalism. ‘Rather than talking to his daughter. her father chooses to constantly watch the news. And a lot of the news is about this current war.‘ Anderson explains. ‘lt interested Mark that there was this long drawn out war. against an enemy that would fight on and on. The Trojan Wars were like this. and I think Mark was interested in that parallel. So there's this war on CNN. and at the same time. there‘s this very personal story. in the case of the myth between Meneleus and Helen.’

Anderson stresses the playful. dryly humorous style of Schultz. yet it seems inescapable that there‘s a pretty solid sense of a corrective discourse under the play. particularly in relation to our attitudes to grief. ‘For a culture that‘s so materialistic and rich. we don‘t have anything to offer people who are grieving. In other cultures that are much poorer than ours. there are social

mechanisms or assumptions where people can be

brought closer in order to cope. In our culture. people battle on and seek solitude in drink or drugs or fantasy.‘ Anderson comments. Troy and make it to this one.

Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, Thu 27-Sat 29 Oct

Theatre

>l<

Hit

THE BEST THEATRE & DANCE

* A Taste of Honey Shelagh Delaney’s funny and quietly moving story of Jo, a young single mother to be, and her troubled relationship with her mother and gay flatmate is very well rendered here. Guy Hollands’ production gives the piece a genuine Theatre workshop feel, recalling the heyday of Joan Littlewood. Touring.

it Betrayal Given the opening of the Arches Pinter season with splendid productions of A Kind of Alaska and Moonlight, there's a lot to look forward to in this revival of our new Nobel Prize-winner's full length piece reflecting upon an eternal triangle. With a cast including Selena Boyack. expect more high quality acting. Arches, Glasgow, until Sat 5 Nov

* A Short Memory of Helen of Troy American dramatist Mark Schultz has already created a sensation in New York with this darkly comic reflection on grief, adolescence and the current war in Iraq. This British premiere from ATC is one to look forward to. Traverse ineatre, Edinburgh, Thu 27—Sat 29 Oct.

* Macbeth Max Stafford Clark’s production for Out of Joint looks to create tense psychological dynamics with its location alone. staged. as it is, in the dark underbelly of the India Buildings. lts post-colonial setting in a war- torn African state adds an interest to the piece. India Buildings, Edinburgh, Wed 26-Sun 30 Oct. It Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? This Citz production looks like a camp highlight of the season. Kenny Miller's chamber musical version of a story best known through Robert Aldrich’s film should entertain with its melodrama and colour. Citizens' Theatre.

Glasgow, Fri 21 Oct-Sat 12 Nov.

20 Oct—3 Nov 2005 THE LIST 81