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MIND PLAY
<'4:48
PSYCHOSIS', performed by Shining Lights, at New Greenham Arts, on Monday, September
2.
New
Greenham Arts has had a delightful new face-lift and also a new resident youth
theatre company Shining Lights. Under the direction of Pete Watt they provide
training specifically for young people to audition for drama schools and have
had success with four of the present cast successfully gaining places. No mean
achievement.
Sarah
Kane's challenging play '4:48 Psychosis' offered an ideal opportunity for each
actor to showcase their talents and they did this with panache!
This
was the playwright's last work before she committed suicide, at the age of 28,
in February 1999. It is difficult to separate her life from the play since it
is a dark journey through the life and experience of a mentally ill young woman
as she is subjected to endless medication to control her clinical depression.
It is a turbulent roller-coaster ride of emotions, anger and frustration. The
4:48 psychosis is "the dawn moment when you're at your sanest and therefore
most prone to suicide". It was also the time for exactly one hour and 12 minutes
when she could write before being subjected to the torment of her inner mind.
The
play is uncompromising, there are no character names, it weaves through both
internal and external monologues and the audience experience the pain, loneliness
and sadness of the characters trapped in this mental black hole.
Quite
a challenge for this company but they handled it with sensitivity and understanding.
The ensemble work was powerfully presented, changing shapes and moods with the
cast working together as a harmonious team as we were invited to share and participate
in their torturous mind games as they drew us into their special world.
James
Elliot gave a splendidly controlled performance as the sympathetic convincing
doctor. Should we trust him or not? Beccy Chaplin chillingly expounded the 4:48
theorem with total conviction and Lucy Butler's outrage at the medical profession
and society was hauntingly vicious!
I
came away from this play deeply moved by the issues raised. It certainly made
me pause and think about society's attitude to mental health. Powerful stuff!