Reviewed by James Karas
Welcome
to dinner with a dysfunctional family. Public Enemy is a
90-minute play by Quebecois playwright Olivier Choinière now playing at the
Berkeley Street Theatre in a production by Canadian Stage. Elizabeth (Rosemary
Dunsmore), an elderly woman is having dinner with her three children and her
two grandchildren. The grandchildren are soon sent to an adjoining TV room and
the adults continue with an “adult” conversation. Not quite.
They have two conversations going on at the same time conducted by two pairs
and the grandchildren are heard intermittently arguing or fighting in the next
room. You catch some of the conversations, but it is not easy to follow what
they are all talking about.
About
ten minutes later, the revolving stage turns revealing the grandchildren in the
adjoining room. We are back to the beginning and the first ten minutes (I am
not sure of the precise duration) of the play are repeated but this time we are
watching the children’s activities and rehearing the conversation of the
adults.
The
children, Tyler (Finley Burke) and Olivia (Maja Vujicic) get into a minor
physical altercation and their fathers Daniel (Matthew Edison) and James
(Jonathan Goad) start a more substantial fight. The scene changes to a balcony
where a squirrel appears being handled by Daniel as if he were a puppeteer. Are
we to I assume that it is a real squirrel, and its handler is not there? I am
not sure. The grandson kills the squirrel.
The
children are a little weird. Tyler is a hulk of a teenager that looks and is
violent. Olivia is mysterious girl and between scenes we see a picture of her
face that covers that entire stage staring at us. There must be a message there
that I did not get.
Daniel has
no job, and he has been living with his mother at her expense. He brings his
girlfriend the floozie-looking Suzie (Amy Rutherford) to live with Elizabeth
and that does not bode well for anyone except perhaps Suzie.
James
and Melissa (Michelle Monteith) are part of the group with Melissa being an
overprotective mother while the grandmother may be overly generous. But the family
discussion does range over a wide span of tonics. Elizabeth is getting old, and
she needs to be put in a nursing home. There are political and financial
issues.
What
Choinière represents on stage may ring true of how family dynamics work. Many
can testify to two-, three- and four-way conversations going on around the
dinner table simultaneously. The participants hear the conversation that he or
she participated in without any concern about what the others were saying. Fair
enough but we are not sitting at the table. We are are watching a performance
and however realistic it may be, it is not satisfactory. Seeing the family talk
at cross purposes at the table and then hearing the same conversation again
from a different angle no doubt represents realism of
sorts but my tolerance for it proved limited.
The
plot gets clearer later and the fate of the old mother is at stake and where
she will end up is of some consequence to her. But by that time, I had given up
to trying to figure out who the public enemy of the title is and what the
virtues of the play are for it to merit a production. Some things are simply not to one’s taste.
_____________________
Public
Enemy by
Olivier Choinière, translated and adapted by Bobby Theodore ran until October 2, 2022 at the Berkeley Street Theatre, 26 Berkeley Street, Toronto,
Ontario.
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