EQUUS Maidment
Theatre
Direction - Colin McColl
Design - John Parker
Costume - Elizabeth Whiting
Lighting - Phillip Dexter
Movement - Shona McCullagh
Sound - John Gibson
Photos - Andrew Malmo
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Set Model images |
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NZ Herald
20.04.05
McColl does Shaffer proud
THEATRE :The Maidment's production of
Equus
fully justifies a modern rerun of a great classic
Reviewed
by Paul Simei-Barton

Shona McCullough's
understated choreography imparts a quiet sense of dignity.
Picture / John McDermott
Since
taking the reins at the Auckland Theatre Company, Colin McColl has shown a knack
for finding plays from the 1960s and 1970s that speak directly to the concerns
of contemporary audiences. Equus would seem an unlikely candidate for revival.
The show was spectacularly successful when it made its debut in 1973 but fell
out of favour during the glitz of the 1980s.
Its continuing relevance is a testament to the complexity of
Peter Shaffer's writing, which eludes any singular interpretation and allows
audiences to discover shades of meaning.
In this production, questions about psychiatric practice and
the nature of madness take second place to a disturbing evocation of the
spiritual dimension. The play addresses brilliantly the anguish we feel in the
absence of ritual - that subtle despondency that creeps into lives that have
banished any sense of the sacred.
John Parker's intelligent set design creates a sterile
institutional space that occasionally cracks open to offer a glimpse of the
world of pagan worship. Through an effective combination of lighting, costume
and sound, the horses are given a god-like quality - aloof and indifferent, they
move like ancient deities to remind us that human existence was once made
comprehensible by the presence of 1000 local deities.
Shona McCullagh's understated choreography imparts a sense of
quiet dignity. Horsiness is established by the smallest of gestures and the
actors deftly avoid the kind of excessive horse mimicry that can so easily
appear ridiculous.
The play is structured like a detective story in which Peter
Elliott, as a menopausal psychiatrist, unravels the meaning behind a senseless
act of cruelty committed by an adolescent patient, played by Kip Chapman. The
encounter between these two is riveting. Chapman swings between petulance and
vulnerability while Elliott slowly sheds his professional demeanour to reveal an
intense yearning for the exhilarating passions of his young charge.
The supporting performances are uniformly excellent. David
Aston and Catherine Wilkin, as the parents of the disturbed boy, are
particularly moving as they vigorously reject the pervasive notion that blame
for aberrant behaviour can invariably be laid at the feet of the parents.
McColl's direction is masterful in its attention to detail.
By dispensing with Shaffer's Brechtian stage directions he brings clarity to the
conflict between characters and seamlessly blends the complex shifts between
naturalism, spectacle and direct address to the audience.
Review
What: Equus
Where: Maidment Theatre
Reviewer: Paul Simei-Barton
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