Synopsis John, a newly-bereaved businessman, is being haunted by the ghost of his wife. In a series of intriguing confessional sessions with newly-qualified therapist, Ian, he explores the hidden guilt behind this strange phenomenon. Ian, however, has problems of his own - his relationship with his girlfriend and the mother of his child is falling apart in the cold light of his new life outside the priesthood. Strong language/adult content Studio
ConorMcPherson's Shining City takes place in the Dublin consulting room of newly-qualified therapist Ian, following his fortunes and those of his first client John in five intense scenes over the next eight months. The play opens with John in great distress after seeing the ghost of his recently-dead wife Mari – incongruously accompanied by the chimes of an ice-cream van - and ends with him moving on and out of their marital home towards a new life.
But while John heals, his kindly therapist, who has recently left the priesthood, is in a turmoil of his own. After his first meeting with John he breaks up with his partner Neasa, with whom he has a child, and to whom we hear he has returned by the final scene – but in between we also see him nervously picking up Laurence, a young prostitute, and it is clear as the door closes behind John for the last time that Ian’s troubles are far from over.
Though Ian is never off the stage, the play’s dramatic heart is in John’s stories, verging on monologues – of how his wife died and of her ghost’s appearance, of his awkward encounter with a married woman, and of his catastrophic visit to a brothel.
Robert Calvert's John holds the audience extremely well during these long narrations, and convincingly suggests a trajectory from barely articulate shock and grief to poised self-knowledge. Director Zoë Waterman keeps the focus tight in John’s early ‘confessional’ scenes, with Patrick Bridgman’s Ian studiously neutral, Calvert’s John curling into himself, and both men hardly moving from their chairs.
The intensity and clarity of these scenes contrast with the more obviously emotional fireworks of Ian’s encounters with his two significant others. The scene with [Adam O’Brian]’s Laurence is tender and funny, with Ian’s hyperactive nervousness accepted and soothed, followed by a gradual moving into closeness and embrace. A scene featuring Sarah Groarke’s Neasa is paradoxically less gripping; as it has the most backstory to get through, and as a break-up scene is the most obviously ‘dramatic’. Perhaps because of this the actors give us broad-brush emotional and physical dynamics rather than the production’s characteristic attention to what is going on beneath the words.
Zoe Waterman's production is gripping and this is not easy to achieve as Shining City is a complex and moving play about the ways we are so often, in John’s words, "just barely hanging in there" – which will make you think twice the next time you hear an ice-cream van.
Located at the side of Derwentwater, Theatre by the Lake offers a whole host of events throughout the year, from visiting drama, music, dance, talks and comedy, to its home-produced work of an Easter production, a Summer Season of six plays and a Christmas show. It also hosts the Keswick Film Festival in February, the Words by the Water Literature Festival in March and the Keswick Jazz Festival in May. The first floor café is open daily and serves a range of snacks and drinks. The Stalls and Circle bars are open on evenings when there is a performance. There are also two free galleries, which host an ever-changing array of work by local and national artists. The theatre has two auditoria - a 380 seat Main House and a 75 seat Studio. Both auditoria are flexible spaces and can be used for in-the-round and end-stage performances, or flat-floored for conferences and trade fairs. Theatre by the Lake offers easy access for all its users. There are lifts to all levels and wheelchair users can get to all front-of-house and backstage areas, including central stalls positions in the Main House. The Main House has enhanced-hearing and induction loop systems.
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