The Scotsman

Rebellion

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

Websters Theatre, Glasgow

IT SEEMS more than timely that Phil Mac Giolla Bhain’s 2016 play Rebellion should reappear in Glasgow in the week that marks the 20th anniversar­y of Northern Ireland’s Good Friday Agreement. Written to mark the centenary of Ireland’s 1916 Easter Rising, Rebellion is not about the peace process; but offers a reminder of the processes of war behind that conflict and how easily they could be reignited.

Set in two time-frames – 1916-19 and the present day – Rebellion follows the story of the Glasgow-irish Murphy family, whose forefather Tom played a major part in the 1916 Rebellion. Tom’sgreat-granddaugh­ter Mary inherits old boxes full of memorabili­a of those times; but meanwhile, in modern Scotland, her Rangers-supporting husband is bullying her beyond endurance, and her son John – a computer whizz-kid – is staging his own dark web rebellion against the powers-that-be of the 21st century.

The style of the two-hour play is invincibly old-fashioned, with two acts of long dialogue scenes set in locations from Mary’s kitchen table to the post-rising British prison camp in Wales. It’s impressive, though, to see the Sweet For Addicts company, working with people whose lives have been touched by addiction, tackle a slice of Glasgow Irish working-class history with such commitment and talent; and if the production’s soundtrack of emotive rebel songs doesn’t quite capture the complexity of the different faces of oppression Mac Giolla Bhain tries to evoke, it nonetheles­s reminds us of the passion for freedom that won Ireland its 21st century place as an independen­t European nation, and of how Britain forgets or discounts that passion at its peril.

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