The later shows have also been a lot more explicit about the playwright's own life story and how it affects both the format and the content; here we do get told about the author being unable to put on a traditional play because at the time of writing (2010) Iran hadn't granted him a passport so he couldn't leave. So Bailey-Smith walks onto a stage with only a chair with his sealed script on it, and a table with two glasses of water, a vial of powder and a spoon on it. As the venue is in-the-round, these are also on a revolve so that, even in a show that hasn't been blocked, everyone can be taken in by the action.
Without going into spoilers what the performer has to read out mostly revolves around a weird fairytale about a white rabbit visiting a circus, and a creepier story about Soleimanpour's unstable uncle performing experiments on white rabbits that include dyeing one of them red. The performer is asked to rope in a number of audience members to help tell the stories, as well as set up a challenge that puts them into a position they might not have thought they were signing up for. Despite dealing with matters of life, death and crushing responsibility the show largely maintains a light tone, although a very specific list of possible suicide methods is coldly disturbing and caused at least one walkout. At first I worried Bailey-Smith seemed to feel under pressure to perform and was doing too much, but as he relaxed into letting the script guide him he became a likeable guide through Soleimanpour's twisted fairytales, an interesting piece of the puzzle of how the writer's gone on to expand and evolve his signature style since.
White Rabbit Red Rabbit by Nassim Soleimanpour is booking until the 9th of November at @sohoplace theatre.
Running time: 1 hour 5 minutes straight through.
This is a real earthy piece of theatre that made a huge impact on me.
ReplyDeleteI saw it wth Toby Jones yesterday. The way he did it was amazing. How the story made sense and more layers of meaning were added to the tale of the rabbit.
The audience member that participated last in this performance was great.
I think this is a play everyone should see.