Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

With StageLight & Magic Inc. set to perform Martin McDonagh’s ‘The Pillowman’, the cast of this post-modern dark comedy talks to Tarini Pilapitiya

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Martin McDonagh’s Tony and Olivier award-winning play ‘The Pillowman’ will bring a dose of dark comedy to Colombo audiences. Also known for his films – ‘In Bruges’, ‘Seven Psychopath­s’ and most recently the Academy award-winning ‘Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri’, McDonagh has an eerie quality in his sardonic narratives that can thrill in the most sinfully pleasurabl­e way.

To be staged on July 7 and 8 at the NamelMalin­i Punchi Theatre, Borella, ‘The Pillowman’ is presented by StageLight & Magic Inc., the same theatre company that brought us versatile fare from hilarious comedies such as ‘Pusswedill­a’ and ‘Freddy’, Shakespear­ean drama and the dark plays of the NOIR theatre festival which still linger in the mind.

Produced by Dininda Paranahewa and directed by Shannon Misso, the cast includes Yasas Ratnayake, Bimsara Premaratne, Ashini Fernando, Biman Wimalaratn­e, Swasha Perera and Tracy Jayasinghe.

The play commences with the largely unpublishe­d writer Katurian being interrogat­ed by two detectives, Tupolski and Ariel, who claim that his macabre fairy tales are the inspiratio­n for the violent murders of children. It is later found that Katurian’s mentally-challenged brother, Michal, too has been taken into custody.

Spotlighti­ng the dark themes of abuse, torture, the legacy of violence and relationsh­ips that revolve around violence, Director Shannon and Producer Dininda have taken great pains to make the most subtle of the writer’s nuances meaningful. Audiences face a conundrum -- to laugh or not to laugh?

Biman who plays Michal, most recently appeared in ‘Shakespear­e in the Park’ and ‘12 Angry Men’.

Michal has the mentality of a child, attributin­g his rough childhood to his “slow ability to pick up things”, he says. To Biman, Michal is someone who lacks empathy -- “something diminished Michal’s ability to care”.

Interestin­gly,

Biman previously played

Katurian in

2012 in an

Australian production of ‘The

Pillowman’. He feels the characters are relatable, allowing him to draw on his personal experience­s to get into the part. However, he shudders, adding that “the repercussi­ons of getting into the role of Katurian were rough”. On the contrary, in playing the brother, Biman says that “there was a lot more rage when I played Katurian - - with Michal there’s just a lot more curiosity”.

Tracy who plays an alter ego or what she describes as an extension of Michal says, “You have to find empathy for this character”. Both actors are teachers, hence their empathy for the roles. “Michal is just a result of the negative effects of ill-treating children,” Tracy says, while Biman nods in agreement and adds: “Children should be protected and nurtured.”

Katurian and Michal are examples of the pressures of fantasies and expectatio­ns of bad parenting, with Katurian giving Michal the only love he has ever known. The “brotherly bond” seen in Act 2 is perhaps the only heartwarmi­ng moment in the production.

Reflecting on his previous and present involvemen­t with ‘The Pillowman’, Biman says that “it was a phenomenal theatre experience”, adding with a grin, “You laugh but it feels so wrong”. For Tracy, “Martin really tests the human condition”.

Biman sums up Michal’s personalit­y enigmatica­lly as “the price paid for creative genius that we don’t get to see”.

Director Shannon says that “Yasas gallantly came to the rescue in May!” after one of their leads had to drop out of the role of Katurian, while Yasas jokes that he is still learning his lines, with his last stage performanc­e being in ‘The Reality Show’ three years ago.

“It’s very exciting to come back to the stage,” he says, adding that this play “demands a lot of focus” due to its heavy nature. “Katurian is, to sum it up, a deadbeat writer who has 400 sto- ries but only with one published.”

Using Hollywood star Jake Gyllenhaal’s famous Donnie Darko-esque vibe to his character, Yasas seems to play around with Katurian’s insecuriti­es of being a social outcast and introvert. “I think everyone is going to respond to this grey character.”

Swasha who like Tracy with Michal plays an extension ‘alter ego’ version of Katurian says that “we see this character progress throughout the play”. Although she does not elaborate whether this progressio­n is negative or positive, it does elicit sympathy, she feels. Swasha whose primary job is to recreate Katurian’s stories, chuckles in agreement at Yasas’s immediate response of “Aw man, it feels awful!” when asked what it feels like to take on the character.

“It’s raw and difficult to watch and recreate,” Swasha says, with Yasas adding that the play reminds him of moments when you are at a funeral and the cause of death is so ridiculous you are not sure whether to laugh or cry. “It’s a lot of emotion and suspense because you’re left wondering where this is leading to,” Swasha shares, as Yasas points out: “This character is neither black nor white, it’s just a lot of grey.”

Although Yasas will shoulder the emotional burden of portraying Katurian, it is Swasha who will embody more of the side of “writer Katurian”.

“I delve more into the alter ego of his writing career -- the excitement, the imaginatio­n and his storytelli­ng quality,”

she says.

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