Anthony Weigh’s version for Hull Truck and the Gate Theatre takes a more drastic approach. Only the five named characters appear, plus a boy whose function is as much symbolic as individual. So there is no community to revolt against or be stifled by; the psychological drama is all. Director Natalie Abrahami seems further to distance any sense of community by choosing a variety of accents. Characters, especially Yerma, seem almost unaware of the world they’ve landed in, words and phrases constantly qualified by doubts about whether that’s what “they” use.
The play proceeds by short scenes until a final effective confrontation between Yerma’s longing for love and motherhood and her husband Juan’s uncomprehending materialism. Lovers of Lorca looking forward to seeing a favourite scene will almost certainly be disappointed. It’s difficult to accept this as even a “version” of Yerma, but as a variant on the same subject it has a certain stylised poetic impact. Ty Glaser’s Yerma, giddy and incessantly giggly, begins like a public school-girl on the first day of the Long Hols, but impresses more as the play progresses, uncomprehending, credulous and tortured. Alison O’Donnell as Maria, Yerma’s friend who produces child after child, has to provide all the local colour and plays the part up to the hilt. Hasan Dixon (Juan) and Ross Anderson (Victor, the butcher – attracted and attractive to Yerma) are required to give rather stolid performances, but Sharon Duncan-Brewster’s Dolores, the wise woman, is suitably exotic.
I am aware of Yerma only through other earlier translations/versions, so certainty is impossible, but I suspect that Federico Garcia Lorca wouldn’t recognise his play or his characters.