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Trial by dialogue
'SALOME', at New
Greenham Arts, on Friday, January 24, and Saturday, January 25
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Oscar Wilde's
'Salome' is notoriously difficult to bring off successfully. Although
defined as a play, like Ibsen's 'Peer Gynt' it is written as a poetic
dialogue. In it, Wilde uses a heightened style of language that intentionally
avoids anything approaching natural speech and also pays little heed to
any staging conventions. In other words, he was experimenting. He even
wrote it in French and left it to Lord Alfred Douglas to translate. |
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In this production
by Shining Lights, director Pete Watt wisely adopted a stylised approach.
All the characters were on stage throughout; when not actually required
they emphasised the decadence of the court by sitting at tables slowly
and unobtrusively miming eating and drinking. A combination of formal
modern costume and distressed make-up further enhanced the air of decay. |
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Unfortunately
there seemed to be no overall decision made on how to deal with artificiality
of the script. A range of techniques was used, some more successful than
others. It was enterprising of a youth group to take on a challenge like
this but they needed a firm directorial hand to guide delivery and achieve
cohesion. |
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