A cast of four soloists are accompanied by the
Manchester-based contemporary music ensemble Psappha conducted by Nicholas Kok.
Lesley Garrett sings the role of Val, a faded beauty of a
toilet attendant in a gay nightclub, to whom the regulars pour out their hearts
as a mother-confessor. Timothy Nelson is Nathan, Val’s estranged son, who
sneaks in to leave a gift for her, and here begins an emotional and ultimately
tragic encounter between mother and son.
There is a sub-plot, in which club regular Matthew (Nick
Pritchard) admires Nathan’s beauty and propositions him, which perplexes Nathan
who is not gay but who seems to be deeply affected by the advances.
The only person to understand much of Val’s past is Anna
Fewmore, the resident drag queen, sung here by Steven Page. The part is by
turns grotesque, comic and knowing, much in the manner of Shakespeare’s fools,
and provides a sounding board for Val’s thoughts.
The soloists are well cast in the roles and all are in fine
voice, with the delivery pin-sharp making every line clear through the weighty
textures of the music. The ensemble is placed on a raised platform overlooking
the stage from the rear, and some of Anna’s numbers are performed from a
projecting platform at this upper level, including a high-camp striptease with
balloons.
Simpson has a distinctive musical language that’s hard to
pin down, but nods toward the sound world of Thomas Ades. The score has a
richness of texture and a strong rhythmic drive, and is well balanced with the
voices. The composer has set the piece outside the club, in the toilets and out
in the street, so that he only alludes to the dance music beyond. In his
programme note he explains that this is a conscious decision to stay in his own
musical style without having to resort to pastiche of techno or electronic
music.
In the earlier scenes Melanie Challenger’s text is a little
clumsy, with some of the character development feeling rather clichéd, but it
settles down as the work progresses.
Director Tim Albery negotiates his cast sinuously around the
obstacle-course of a set from designer Leslie Travers - a massive,
deconstructed neon sign that depicts the various passageways and plumbing of
the club.
The narrative, though short, is one of traditionally
operatic tragedy. Val and Nathan’s story could have happened anywhere, but Mark
Simpson chose to set it in surroundings familiar to him from his teenage years,
basing Val on a real toilet attendant who many Liverpudlians still recall, if
you ask in the right places.
Pleasure is at Snape Maltings in Aldeburgh this weekend
followed by a week of performances at the Lyric Hammersmith.
Steven Page as Anna Fewmore - Image (c) Robert Workman |
This review
was originally written for Good News Liverpool and Seen Magazine
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