The Scotsman

From moving absurdist images to intensely physical theatre

-

Manipulate Festival

Various venues, Edinburgh

Saturday afternoon at Summerhall, and on the floor of the old Anatomy Lecture Theatre something is stirring. Three male figures lie stranded in the sixth circle of hell. One rises and sings like a monk at prayer, one glows with an unearthly light as he burns in his personal hell and one emotes like the poet he is; Dante Alighieri, the 14th-century Florentine genius who dared, in an age dominated by Latin verse, to use his own Tuscan language to explore great matters of life, death and eternity.

The show is a work-inprogress called Canto X, created by the Edinburgh group Fronteiras Theatre Lab, including writer-dramaturg Jen Mcgregor and director Flavia D’avila. Although, at the moment, it exists only as a 20-minute fragment, it shows that the spirit of 19thcentur­y symbolism lives on in the hearts of young Scottishba­sed theatremak­ers.

It remains as high-risk a path as it was when young Konstantin in Chekhov’s Seagull first staged his much-mocked drama by the lake in 1896, but there’s also something rich, strong and lyrical in Mcgregor’s engagement with the work of Dante and in the interweavi­ng of movement, music and dialogue to explore the meaning of his great poem.

Canto X was just one of 17 live shows playing at Summerhall on Saturday, in an all-day showcase – mainly featuring the work of young and emerging Scottish artists – to mark the beginning of Scotland’s annual internatio­nal festival of visual theatre.

For me, the exquisite artistic highlight of the day was a solo show called Ersatz (✪✪✪✪✪), by French company Collectif Aie Aie Aie, in which superb artist and performer Julien Mellano, sitting at a desk surrounded by glaring screens, evokes a deeply moving absurdist image of a future life made up of virtual experience­s, in which human beings become almost like robots, while the planet dies around us. Aie Aie Aie also brought their charming 30-minute erotic comedy Ma Biche Et Mon Lapin( ✪✪✪✪). Between them, these two shows, each with its own flawless narrative arc, set a memorably high bar of thematic coherence and technical perfection.

Measuring up in impressive style, though, were Scottish absurdists Swallow The Sea Caravan with a perfectly pitched 20-minute cameo called Lamp (✪✪✪✪), inspired by the dramatic potential of two large old-fashioned fringed lampshades, and Dundee’s Nunah Theatre, with Vicky Heath’s ferociousl­y intense physical theatre workin-progress Remember, about a woman driven to violence by a lifetime of bullying.

A little less certain in tone and execution were Mary & David Grieve’s lovely, pensive puppet piece Shadow Bird (✪✪✪), about the inner life and dreams of an old downand-out drinking in a Scottish pub, Katie Armstrong’s overextend­ed but sometimes brilliantl­y intense abstract dance piece Sketches (✪✪✪ )and Oceanallov­er’s brilliantl­y colourful Transfigur­ed (✪✪✪), which deserves lavish praise for the beauty and wildness of its singing and for its gorgeous quilted fabric costumes, evoking something between the constantly reshufflin­g pack of cards on which the show is based, and a Shakespear­ean shipwreck; but nul points for its leaden script, poor dramaturgy and old-fashioned, super-arch white-face acting style.

All of which provokes some thought about the role of the abstract, the stylised, the symbolic and the absurd in theatre, more than a century after these concepts began to disturb the certaintie­s of contrived stage naturalism. Like the mummers of old, visually stunning stylised spectacles such as Transfigur­ed can still delight large crowds at street festivals. Yet in itself, and indoors, non-naturalist­ic theatre often still seems plagued by problems of accessibil­ity and inclusion. It was striking, for example, that there was not a single performer of colour in any of the eight shows I saw at Summerhall on Saturday.

As an arena for theatrical experiment, in other words – in the brilliant use of light and objects, and in expanding the technical possibilit­ies of theatre – the Manipulate Festival plays its role magnificen­tly. In building a bridge between experiment­al performanc­e and the wider world, though, it faces a tougher task, and it will be interestin­g to see how it plays out, as the festival continues this week at Summerhall and the Festival Theatre Studio.

Manipulate 2020 continues in Edinburgh until 8 February. For details see https:// www.manipulate­festival.org/ whatson/.

JOYCE MCMILLAN

 ??  ?? 0 Katie Armstrong’s Sketches was sometimes brilliantl­y intense
0 Katie Armstrong’s Sketches was sometimes brilliantl­y intense

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom