Saturday 25 June 2016

The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender - Leslye Walton



"Of the stories and the myths that surrounded my family and my life - some of them thoughtfully scattered by you perhaps - let it be said that, in the end, I found all of them to be strangely, even beautifully, true."

This tale, though quite short, spans three generations, firmly establishing that the strangeness lay in Ava Lavender's blood. 

We start with her grandmother, Emilienne. We follow her through her growing years, her lost loves, the choices that led her to Pinnacle Lane. We learn of her brutal, tragic past, which led to the decisions she would make later in life. We come to understand how this story will likely proceed.

Then, we move on to Ava's mother, Viviane. We see her live her young years as a free spirit, loving freely and deeply, living without limits. We witness how loss makes her shapeless, haunts her for years. We see love at its best, and love at its worst, and we see how one embraces it and lets it go.

Finally, we reach Ava Lavender, a girl born with wings on her back. Her wings bring worship, interest, fascination, and worry, and she is thus hidden from the world, kept away from prying eyes. She has few friends her age, and ignorance of the world outside brings about a chain of events that bring us to the last arc before curtain call.

--

This story was indeed strange and possibly even beautiful (though at times it would be inappropriate to use this word), so much so that it had an aura about it, something special and difficult to explain. It is a story to remember, with characters you would find hard to forget. 

In the beginning, the brutality in certain parts of the piece jarred me. It seemed as if they were brought about by some magic or brief bout of insanity. Sometimes, I found that things didn't make sense or were really sudden, but I had to learn to get over that, because the beginning set the tone for everything else. The stories were in some parts mercilessly cruel, shaped by the desires and emotions of the characters such that harm and unhappiness were inflicted on others. Many events in the story were soaked in tragedy and depravity, and as a result the lives of many were shaped and even defined by them. If one were looking for a nice romance, they would find some specimens in these pages quite unpleasant.

The tagline of the story, "Love makes us such fools.", provides an explanation for that. Love is blind, Love is foolish. Love invokes strong emotions, Love perpetuates rash decisions. Many acts in the books are brought about by Love's devastation, Love's devotion and Love's compulsion. Love can affect people in many ways, sometimes horribly and sometimes kindly. This book managed to unmask the ugly side of Love while preserving its beauty, positivity, and endless potential with different examples, and I love it that much more for that. (Hee.)

The characters were fleshed out remarkably well considering the size of the book and the number of stories unfolding within, and I became attached to them surprisingly quickly. I did not dislike even those who made bad decisions and irresponsible choices (though, I do dislike just the one - however I am pretty sure we were not meant to like that character anyway) and came to treasure them and accept them and their stories. I cherish what I got to experience with them, and would probably do it all over again.

Overall, I liked this story. The story could not have been told in any other way, many characters were beautifully explored, and the greatest message delivered was one of hope and possibilities, something that left me satisfied as I exited the strange and beautiful world I had been granted entrance to.

- Savant

Saturday 11 June 2016

Review: "Ghost Writer" by The Necessary Stage


Are you living a life to fulfill someone else's purpose?

Helmed by Cultural Medallion recipients Alvin Tan and Haresh Sharma of The Necessary Stage, Ghost Writer offers a glimpse into the lives of characters intertwined by blood and ties that bind-and suffocate. 

A young dancer who has undergone traditional training feels dislocated within her artistic practice in her home country. A new expatriate wife detached from her immediate reality draws inspiration from the writings of strangers past and present, and tries to reinvent herself. A teacher seeks to save a school that she had inherited, but finds her quest leaves her more lonely than ever.
A meditative interdisciplinary production that charts the collisions of people seeking to alter their destinies, Ghost Writer grapples with the question of how independent our lives can be. Are we existing based on other people's terms, or can we transcend tradition and memory to rewrite our own stories?

Ahhhhh my heart.

I've always loved Haresh Sharma's works. I'm in love with physical movement. So Ghost Writer was naturally something I wanted to see. And I was not disappointed. Kinda.

Ghost Writer makes use of various art forms: theatre, dance, multimedia and music. Music was played live by Bani Haykal and sung by Namita Mehta, something new that I enjoyed. The various mediums intertwined perfectly to create a stage that looked like something out of a contemporary art museum. The set was simple: a table for actors on stand by to sit at and four screens on wheels. Projections showed character's stories as they spoke, providing exposition to the audience.

The cast did not disappoint. With a mixture of dancers and theatre artists, they were able to perform as one entity, one body as they moved perfectly in time. Sharda Harrison (aka Thespian's goals) was a perfect choice for Nandini, an expatriate wife who copes with the death of her sister years later. Sharda was able to portray Nandini's grief and at the same time distinguish herself from the character when she acted as a narrator and inner voice of others. (Sharda if you're reading this I freaking love you). Ruby Jayaseelan portrayed Priya, a dancer, well, showing her struggle with her Indian roots and origin, the reason for her success but the one thing she pushed away. However, Jereh Leong's character seemed rather redundant, barely making any impact on the storyline.

One may not understand the story when watching the show (I heard many "What the hell?"s after the show) but I personally did not attend for the plot. I attended for the movements and dance. And I left feeling completely inspired. The movements of the cast was so controlled and graceful at the same time. It really makes one wonder how much training it took for them to get it perfect. Times like these, I'm reminded why I love this art and what I want to become.

Ghost Writer may have been avant garde and not really suitable if you're a new comer to the theatre scene. But if you're looking for a feast for the eyes, you've chosen the right show.

-Thespian

Sunday 22 May 2016

Ghost Writer



Ghost Writer
Date: 9 to 12 June 2016
Venue: Esplanade Theatre Studio 
Duration: approx. 70 mins

Are you living a life to fulfill someone else's purpose?

Helmed by Cultural Medallion recipients Alvin Tan and Haresh Sharma of The Necessary Stage, Ghost Writer offers a glimpse into the lives of characters intertwined by blood and ties that bind-and suffocate. 
A young dancer who has undergone traditional training feels dislocated within her artistic practice in her home country. A new expatriate wife detached from her immediate reality draws inspiration from the writings of strangers past and present, and tries to reinvent herself. A teacher seeks to save a school that she had inherited, but finds her quest leaves her more lonely than ever.
A meditative interdisciplinary production that charts the collisions of people seeking to alter their destinies, Ghost Writer grapples with the question of how independent our lives can be. Are we existing based on other people's terms, or can we transcend tradition and memory to rewrite our own stories?


Tickets at http://www.sistic.com.sg/events/ghost0616

They've got a pretty good cast going on here; Ebi Shankara, Sharda Harrison (bless Sharda Harrison). Plus Haresh Sharma has always been one of my favourite playwrights so go and check it out!

-Thespian

Made You Up - Francesca Zappia

Made You Up

"Sometimes I think people take reality for granted."

The story centers around high school senior Alexandra Ridgemont (Alex, for short), who is schizophrenic and suffers from extreme paranoia.

We start with an incident that happened when she was seven: her mother brings her to the grocery store and leaves her in front of the lobster tanks. She spends some time staring at the lobsters, marvelling at the redness of their shells and comparing it to her own very red hair. Then, she meets a boy with the bluest of eyes, gets to know him a little, and together they set the whole tank of lobsters free. Her mother comes back, freaks out, and drags her away from the boy. The end.

Except that's not really what happened.

Lobsters aren't red unless they're boiled, and she hadn't set any of them free at all.

Alex classifies the whole incident as something she'd imagined. The adults around her classify the whole incident as Alex's first sign of schizophrenia.

But then, on the day before her first day at East Shoal, a boy comes to her work place. A boy with the bluest of eyes.

And suddenly, Alex isn't so sure she'd imagined the whole thing.

~.~

Here's the thing: Alex is an unreliable narrator.

We see things from her point of view, so many things she thinks are real are not, while many things she thinks are not real actually are. I cannot tell you how many times I had to think the events in the story over. Even now, I'm not sure what happened at certain points. Sometimes, you just have to accept that some things are not meant to be understood.

Alex struggles constantly with her schizophrenia - she can barely tell what she sees apart, she has to take pictures of so many things because she thinks seeing things through the photographs will help her see them as they really are, and she doesn't want anyone to find out about her schizophrenia because she knows everyone will stop believing what she says and start seeing her as a mental patient on the loose. It is much harder for her to get into college, something that her parents are constantly worried about. It is also much harder for her to interact with other people.

Whenever something was revealed to be part of Alex's hallucination, a part of Alex's world comes crashing down. The small things don't make such a big impact, but the larger things do. These parts are written off as stemming from her imagination, but the thing is that Alex has nothing else to replace these parts with, and they all leave something hollow in their place.

But the thing is, a big chunk of the story could have been a part of Alex's hallucinations, and it wouldn't matter at all. We have to empathise with Alex, understand her. Whatever is in the book is the truth to her, and we have to stop being concerned about the real truth to enjoy her story.

That's one thing I liked about this story.

I also found Alex very admirable, because she tried really hard. She tried to cope with her delusions, she tried to get through her final year so she could go on to college, she tried to help the people around her. She tried to take charge of her life, in spite of everything working against her. Not everyone can do that; not everyone tries. She did, and that made her a great protagonist to follow.

There's romance in this novel (not surprising, considering it is YA), and I have to say I rather liked it. It starts off with a mini prank war (because enemies to lovers is always the best) and slowly develops from there. It wasn't insta-love - at least, I don't think so. The characters revealed parts of themselves to each other slowly, got into fights, and eventually developed trust and came to an understanding. Honestly, it was kind of amazing. The guy, Miles, supported Alex, helping her constantly and believing her even when it was difficult to, and she supported him as he faced his own demons. They were each other's safe place and pillar of support; it isn't hard to believe they fell in love with each other.

Overall, I'm all for this book. It was pretty realistic, it didn't force the ending, and the romance wasn't pushed at the reader. Plus, it was really amusing at some parts. ("I wished I had put more cherries on that slice. The whole jar of cherries. I could watch him eat a whole jar of cherries. Jesus Christ on a pogo stick, what was happening to me?")

I'd recommend this book, especially if you would like to understand how certain people try to cope and live with mental illness. I wouldn't recommend it if you are one to get frustrated by doubt and confusion or bored with a general school setting.

If any of you pick it up, tell me what you think!


- Savant

Ready! Set! Zo!



Ready! Set! Zo!

Date: 25 to 29 May 2016
Venue: The Substation, 45 Armenian Street Singapore 179936
Suitable for: Recommended for 6 to 13 years old
Duration: 50 minutes with no interval

Ready! Set! Zo! is a tongue-in-cheek re-telling of the popular story of the Chinese Zodiac and how the animals got their place on the Lunar Calendar! Join the contestants as they brave all odds to make it across the raging river! This is the race of a lifetime where mischief meets hard work, determination and grace! So if you’re READY, Get SET… and lets ZO!

Devised and developed by CREATIVE EDGE, this is the graduation performance for I Theatre’s Theatre Training Ensemble.
Suitable for ages 6 to 13 years


Savant and I may not be attending this play but if you have young ones who love theatre, do check it out. The cast is amazing and we're pretty sure that Creative Edge's performance will be better than their last one. Do tell us about it when you get back!

-Thespian