Written by David French. Directed by Ted Dykstra. Featuring Jeff Lillico,
Kenneth Welsh. Presented by Soulpepper Theatre Company. To July 30.
Mon-Sat, 8pm; Wed & Sat mat 2pm. Single tickets, $50-$68; students
with ID or those aged 21-30, $28; regular rush $20; youth rush $5 (age
21 and under). Young Centre, Bldg. 49, Distillery Historic District, 55
Mill St. 416-866-8666.
www.soulpepper.ca.
Soulpepper plus David French adds up to yet another great evening of theatre. For Of the Fields, Lately (1973), French’s sequel to his breakthrough play Leaving Home (1972),
Soulpepper has brought back Jeff Lillico, Kenneth Welsh and Diane
D’Aquila to play the same roles of Ben Mercer and his parents Jacob and
Mary that they did for Soulppeper’s superb staging of Leaving Home in 2007. Adding to the realism, the action of Fields takes place two years after that of Home,
so we and the actors have aged exactly as much as the characters. Eric
Peterson in the role of Ben’s Uncle Wiff completes the starry cast.
Outwardly, little happens. Ben returns home for the funeral of his
Aunt Dot, Mary’s sister and Wiff’s wife, to discover that his father
has been off work with a bad heart. To stay and help the family’s
finances or to leave and let his father die at work is Ben’s dilemma.
The play is shot through with the mordant humour of this displaced
Newfoundland family, but its underlying themes will tug at the emotions
of anyone with ageing parents or relatives. Mary states that we're all
fighting the same enemy -- Time. French details with great sensitivity
how each of the characters comes to accept this reality.
This is most difficult for Ben and Jacob, a father and son too alike in
male pride to express their real feelings for each other. Welsh and
Lillico convey all the anger, humour and, ultimately, tragedy of their
repeatedly unsuccessful attempts to communicate. D’Aquila is once
again the indomitable mother but now haunted with fear of losing Jacob.
Peterson’s Wiff, actively dealing with a death in his own foolish but
endearing way, represents the subtext of the Mercers’ worries made
explicit. As in Leaving Home,
director Ted Dykstra draws completely natural, all-too-believable
performances from the cast who interact in anger and conciliation just
like a real family. The underlying sadness that comes through
especially in Lillico’s monologues is how isolated all individuals are
from each other, how unknowable the real nature is of even those we
love the most. It’s a privilege to see how effortlessly Dykstra and
this ideal cast so fully capture the play’s subtle beauty.