Reviewed by James Karas
Fifteen Dogs is a play by Marie Farsi based on the novel of the same name by Andre Alexis. In the novel Alexis
takes a flight of the imagination where the gods Apollo and Hermes decide to
give dogs human attributes and bet on whether any of them can live and die
happily unlike the rest of us mortals.
Farsi’s
play indeed has fifteen dogs of various breeds and characteristics who are
granted human traits including speech of sorts and the ability
to understand love and people to some extent. The play also features gods, muses
and people. All these characters are played by six actors who have their work
cut out for them. They have to change costumes, be people and dogs in quick and
varied order.
Here
are some examples of the number of roles that the actors have to tackle. Laura
Condlin plays Max, Bella, Rosie, Clare, Nira, Clotho, Old Woman, and Narrator.
All of the actors narrate part of the play because most scenes would not make
much sense without Alexis’s text.
Peter
Fernandes plays Lydia, Athena, Benjy, Atropos and Narrator. Stephen Jackman-Torkoff
plays Ronaldinho, Prince, Miguel, Bobbie, Zeus and Narrator. Tom Rooney, one of the best in the cast, gets
off lightly with the number of roles – Manjoun, Randy and Narrator but plays
one of the most significant parts.
Tyrone
Savage has four roles and one of them is a major part: Atticus, Apollo, Driver
and Narrator Mirabella Sundar Singh
plays Agatha, Frick, Frack, Dougie, Hermes, Lachesis and Narrator.
That adds up to a crowd of 33 characters made up of dogs, mortals and immortals. The actors are people who pretend to be dogs who pretend to be people or at least have many awful and some decent human tendencies. The actors as dogs bark, howl, roll over and usually speak pidgin English and we need to believe that the canines are “human” in accordance with the transformation or transfiguration meted on them by the gods of Olympus.
That
is a big and complicated crowd to be
handled by six actors and I had difficulty following all the changes and
permutations of the plot. My real problem was watching actors pretend to be
dogs that pretend to be people. The novel asks us to imagine dogs acting like
us – murderous, cruel, ambitious, decent, loveable and needy. I could not make
the leap from that to a whole play dominated by the conduct of dogs with human
characteristics at that.
The
play does cover a lot of human ground as some of the dogs become attuned to
people and our behaviour. Love, hatred, fidelity, treachery, kindness, cruelty,
hatred, power, submission are all there and if you can overlook many things you
can take the play as a staged myth with mostly modern overtones which may take
away from the mythical context.
The
play takes place in Toronto and we have specific places like High Park, names
of streets in the west end of the city and a pleasantly familiar setting. The
Greek gods and the rest of the characters wear mostly a hodgepodge of modern
costumes (some differ and Zeus is the exception) and we meet Hermes and Apollo
in a Toronto bar.
Marie Farsi adapted Alexis’ novel for the stage and directed the play. The movements and quick changes in scene and characters looks nightmarish but Farsi handled the whole thing adeptly.
_______________
Fifteen Dogs by Marie Farsi adopted from the
novel by Andre Alexis continues until February 12, 2023, in Guloien Theatre at Streetcar
Crownest Theatre, 345 Carlaw Avenue, Toronto, Ontario M4M 2T1. http://crowstheatre.com/
James Karas is the
Senior Editor – Culture of The Greek Press. This review appeared initially in
the newspaper.
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