Well-written, well-performed tragic tale
The Unnatural
and Accidental Women
By Marie Clements
Co-Directed by Marie Clements and Donna Spencer
A Firehall Arts Centre Production
Firehall Arts Centre until Nov. 25.
Review
By Zoe Leigh Hopkins
Raven's Eye Writer
VANCOUVER
Marie Clements, playwright and co-director, has managed to
turn a true story of murder and tragedy from what is gruesome
and despicable at best into a beautifully presented and acted
play that is now premiering in Vancouver.
The play is inspired by the deaths of at least 10 women who died
in the 1980s after being given alcohol by Gilbert Paul Jordan,
a man who has been named in the news media as one of our country's
deadliest predators.
Jordan now walks free after having served six years for manslaughter
in the death of one of these women. The news items that still
run on TV and in the papers focus on Jordan and his life-long
career of crime, but all that is usually said about the victims
is that most of them were Native, alcoholics and lived on skid
row.
One would think that a play that is based on a true story that
is both enraging and terribly sad would be hopelessly dark, depressing
and bleak. But Clements has written dialogue that is playful
and engaging, even spurring laughter in the audience.
Clements focuses on the lives of the women, their humanity and
emotions, honoring them by rendering them as human beings who
lived and loved.
The women are portrayed by a talented cast that includes Gloria
May Eshkibok, Michelle St. John, Sophie Merasty and Columpa Bobb,
all of whom are award-winning, renowned theatre actors.
St. John plays Rebecca, a fictional character who is a young
woman in search of her mother on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.
Her character lives in Kitsilano in a lifestyle far removed from
the last known whereabouts of her mother.
Rebecca's story weaves through the play, finally connecting with
the rest of the women in an ending that builds slowly and puts
a stop to the tragedies.
We don't get as much personal history about the women who died
as we do about the character Rebecca, but we do gain insight
into their personalities. We watch them pass into the afterlife
and go on interacting with each other in a wonderfully surreal
and sometime sad, sometimes humorous, manner.
The characters are nicely varied and performances are as solid
as the writing, which combines monologue and dialogue, weaving
prose with conversation and song.
The writing style also reflects the presentation of the play,
which is beautifully designed to include projected video, images
and text. This, along with excellent use of the space in a multi-level
set creates a dynamic, visually interesting and thought-provoking
piece.