The Scotsman

Act of remembranc­e played with passion

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The 306: Dusk Perth Theatre JJJJ

As we approach the 100th anniversar­y of the armistice that ended the First World War, memorial events gather ever more intensely around us; and at the centre of the commemorat­ions, so far as Scottish theatre is concerned, sits the final part of this great Perth Theatre/national Theatre of Scotland trilogy, The 306. The project is co-commission­ed by the 14-18 Now Festival, the British government’s official commemorat­ion body; but uniquely, this trilogy of shows by composer Gareth Williams and writer Oliver Emanuel is dedicated to the memory of the 306 lost British servicemen of the 1914-18 war who were shot at dawn, by their own side, for what was then called cowardice or desertion.

The trilogy began in May 2016 with Laurie Sansom’s memorable production, in a barn in Perthshire, of The 306: Dawn; it continued last year with the touring show The 306: Day, directed by Jemima Levick, about the women who remained on the home front. And now, with Wils Wilson directing, we have The 306: Dusk, a 90-minute meditation on the war and its impact set on 11 November 2018, and presented through the thoughts and voices of three characters.

Rachel is a pregnant schoolteac­her suddenly overwhelme­d by memories of her ex-soldier grandfathe­r during a school trip to the Flanders war cemeteries. Keith is an Iraq war veteran with a life devastated by post-traumatic stress, who makes the same armistice day pilgrimage; and then there is the returning spirit of Private Louis Harris, the last of the 306 to be shot, still present in the same woods in which Rachel and Keith find refuge.

It’s probably true that Emanuel’s text achieves a little less than it hopes, in truly analysing the impact of the First World War history on our attitudes to armed conflict today. The trilogy’s focus on the 306, though, compels an unrelentin­g honesty about the sheer horror of war, both in 1914-18 and now.

And with Sarah Kameela Impey, Ryan Fletcher and an outstandin­g Danny Hughes singing and acting their way through fine performanc­es as the three

characters, and Gareth Williams’s magnificen­t score for community choir and fivepiece string quartet gradually moving forward through

Cecile Tremoliere­s’s beautiful screened set to take centre stage in an overwhelmi­ng closing litany of names, this final part of the trilogy

emerges as a unique act of remembranc­e in its own right, full of passion and pity, and of determinat­ion that, at last, every one of

the names of the 306 should be remembered, honoured, and heard.

JOYCE MCMILLAN

Perth Theatre until 27 October

 ??  ?? 0 Ryan Fletcher as Keith, a veteran, Sarah Kameela Impey as teacher Rachel and Danny Hughes as Private Harris all shine
0 Ryan Fletcher as Keith, a veteran, Sarah Kameela Impey as teacher Rachel and Danny Hughes as Private Harris all shine
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