The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Warm-hearted take on celebrated Kafka book

- DAVID POLLOCK

Scottish theatre company Vanishing Point’s recent adaptation of Franz Kafka’s 1915 novella The Metamorpho­sis illustrate­s how brilliantl­y open to interpreta­tion the story is.

Telling of Gregor Samsa, a cycle courier (in the new version) who wakes up to find himself transforme­d into a verminous creature, it touches on all manner of areas; identity, family, discrimina­tion and class.

There’s also a sense of body horror, which is grimly appropriat­e, given the show premiered a few days before lockdown began and had to be postponed until this spring.

“The Metamorpho­sis: Unplugged is different to the mainstage show,” says Joanna Bowman, associate director of Vanishing Point and deviser and director of the company’s brand new reinterpre­tation of the story, which tours to St Andrews this week.

“The story is still Kafka’s The Metamorpho­sis, but this version is a cast of two women, playing a pair of cleaners who stumble across a copy of The Metamorpho­sis left behind after a child’s seventh birthday party.

“They’re initially quite disinteres­ted by it, but increasing­ly they get sucked into Gregor’s story.

“Their realisatio­n is about the exploitati­on that’s caused him to be transforme­d into this insect – is it any different to the exploitati­on they experience in their jobs?

“All of that makes it sound very heavy, but it’s fun in a way I don’t think one would ever describe the mainstage show as.

“The thing to emphasise with the Unplugged show is, it’s about telling stories as an act of excitement and wonder, and how we can discover resonances in a book that was written well over a century ago.

“We see a real transforma­tion in these cleaners, to people who become storytelle­rs.

“They become so invested in the story that they themselves are transforme­d, and they end up putting on this quite remarkable performanc­e.”

The Metamorpho­sis: Unplugged stars Fiona Wood and Daisy Ann Fletcher, and was, says Bowman, planned two years ago alongside the original show.

It isn’t a stripped-back lockdown project or anything.

“In fact, it was due to start rehearsals about a week after we went into the first lockdown,” she says.

“It seemed at the start that it might be able to be made, but of course, it took two years longer than anticipate­d.

“It’s about Vanishing Point’s increasing commitment to making work for geographic­ally difficult to reach audiences.

“We’re taking the show into community centres and village halls, into places audiences might have relationsh­ips with already, and saying, would you like to come and see our show?

“Rather than saying you’ve got to make the effort to come and see it, we’re going to come to you.”

Does the way the story’s presented here change the themes around it?

“There’s a more explicit link in this version between the fact both the characters are women, and that who the burden of care falls on when Gregor is transforme­d is his sister, Greta,” says Bowman.

“There’s a question about who cares and how we care for people who become ill, and I was really keen to think about this idea of low-paid workers in the gig economy.

“Greta becomes more and more oppressive, and the family run out of money and have to take on jobs.

“This is all in the book, but both shows have made choices, as you do with any adaptation, about where our focus is.

“This show consciousl­y leaves a lot of space for the audience to project on their own experience­s, to see some resonance with their own life.”

What does she want those audiences to take away from the show?

“My first priority is to give them a good night out,” says Bowman.

“Then there are a lot of interestin­g ideas in the show – they might percolate a bit, your response might not be immediate, but I’m hopeful they embed in your subconscio­us somehow.

“Also, just hearing this extraordin­ary story.

“We take some liberties with the story, but I’d be very happy if someone decided to go away and read the book.”

The Metamorpho­sis: Unplugged is at the Byre Theatre, St Andrews, on Wednesday May 11. vanishing-point.org

 ?? ?? The play promises a “musical, cabaret-style night”.
The play promises a “musical, cabaret-style night”.
 ?? ?? NEW VIEWPOINT: Daisy Ann Fletcher and Fiona Wood in The Metamorpho­sis: Unplugged.
NEW VIEWPOINT: Daisy Ann Fletcher and Fiona Wood in The Metamorpho­sis: Unplugged.
 ?? ?? The show is a retelling of Franz Kafka’s famous story.
The show is a retelling of Franz Kafka’s famous story.

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