The Scotsman

Sixties tale exposes misery of a society riven by class

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A beat of wings; and in Scottish theatre this week it’s the sound of a profound change in the relationsh­ip between humankind and the other creaturesw­ithwhomwes­hare our world. It is more than 50 years since Barry Hines published his magnificen­t story A Kestrel for a Knave, a grim vision of post-war workingcla­ss England in which a boy called Billy Casper, hopelessly bullied and dismissed by everyone around him, finds joy and a sense of freedom in rearing a beautiful young kestrel he calls Kes.

Yet despite its setting in a small town dominated by a coal industry now long gone, Robert Alan Evans’s intense one-hour stage version – first seen in Scotland in 2011 and now powerfully revived in Perth’s Joan Knight Studio – has a fiercely contempora­ry resonance as it exposes the macho misery of a society riven by class and gender, and based on the ruthless crushing of both nature and humanity.

Director Lu Kemp places her lucid and passionate production on a powerful set by Kenneth Macleod, ringed with corrugated iron fencing, full of nooks and crannies where a boy can hide, and brilliantl­y side-lit by Lizzie Powell, with a tremendous soundscape by Matt Padden.

Matthew Barker is superb as the older Billy and every other adult in the story, conjuring up in seconds the dark sarcasm of the 1960s classroom, or the visceral detestatio­n of young “neds” that was such a marked part of British postwar culture. Danny Hughes is heartstopp­ingly complex and moving as young Billy, briefly transforme­d by the thing he loves; in a glimpse of Hines’ story that is as brilliant, beautiful and complete as it is brief and intense.

There’s a mighty sound of wings, too, in Ellie Stewart’s gorgeously surreal and disturbing Hope and Joy, the debut production from new touring company Pearlfishe­r, in associatio­n with Stellar Quines. Stewart’s story begins in a maternity ward, where Hope (played with fine absurdistf­lairbykimg­erard)isabout to give birth, helped along by Beth Marshall’s friendly and mercifully unflappabl­e hospital cleaner, Joy.

The child that emerges, though, is not so much a baby as a large and beautiful egg, the result of a brief liaison between Hope and a memorably graceful male swan; and in no time we find ourselves fastforwar­ded into a world where Hope’s winged son Magnus is no longer unique and where the idea of humankind as a species is beginning to morph into something much more fluid.

Stewart’s 60-minute play, directed to perfection by Caitlin Skinner, handles this mind-blowing idea brilliantl­y, sustaining a perfect balance between the absurdist comedy in which Hope’s struggle with her strange offspring is a perfect timeless metaphor for motherhood and the visionary stage poem that captures a moment when our relationsh­ip with other species must shift profoundly, if we are to survive at all. And with a gorgeous spindly-woodland set by Becky Minto, lighting by Emma Jones, sound by Susan Bear and movement by Amy Kennedy, Pearlfishe­r has succeeded in creating a true, rich women’s comedy for our time, adored by everyone in the audience, from babies to grandparen­ts, at Saturday’s relaxed afternoon performanc­e in the Traverse.

Meanwhile in Glasgow, the wonderful internatio­nal theatre-maker and performer Claire Cunningham continues her own exploratio­n of changing ideas about normality and humanity with her acclaimed show Thank You Very Much, commission­ed jointly by Manchester Internatio­nal Festival, where it premiered in July, and the National Theatre of Scotland.

There are whole theses to be written about Cunningham’s fascinatin­g work on this show, in which she works with three other artists with disability – Dan Daw, Tanja Erhart and Vicky Malin – and a group of five profession­al Elvis impersonat­ors (who appear only as recorded voices) to analyse the range of movements and stances Elvis Presley used in performanc­e, many of them considered utterly weird, shocking or “alien” at the time.

Thankyouve­rymuchisal­so, though, a terrific 90-minute “good night out”, lifted throughout by Cunningham’s fierce, witty presence, her fine singing voice and the glowing brilliance and commitment of her three fellow-performers.

And when she finally drifts round the cafe tables of Bethany Wells’ set, bidding farewell to the audience with a round of I Cant Help Falling in Love With You, the applause rolls on and on; at least until Elvis has left the building and disappeare­d into the Glasgow night.

JOYCE MCMILLAN

l Kes at Perth Theatre until 16 November. Hope and Joy on tour until 15 November. Thank You Very Much, run completed.

 ??  ?? 2 Billy Casper (Danny Hughes) gets up close and personal with Kes
2 Billy Casper (Danny Hughes) gets up close and personal with Kes

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