Savages | Darlinghurst Theatre CompanyLeft – Troy Harrison, Yure Covich, Josef Ber and Tom Campbell. Cover – Tom Campbell, Josef Ber, Yure Covich and Troy Harrison. Photos – Helen White

Jeremy Allen's elegant production design for Darlinghurst Theatre Company's production of Patricia Cornelius' Savages evokes a stylish nautical nuance with its portholes and wooden decks. It suggests a sunny, funny, carefree spree at sea, deckchair indolence, relaxed daytime quoits perhaps a precursor to night-time romantic coitus.

Lights down, the play commences, but not to open on sunny, sea spray, seagull strewn skies, but darkness and haze as four figures, male, are expelled onto the stage, foetal first then unfurling fully formed, product of a primordial soup.

Lights up on the four fellows, pumped with the anticipation of leaving all their weary woes on shore as they cast off on a cruise of careless abandon. Exuberant fun loving lads, three of them son loving dads, all of them deluded unloving cads.

Alpha male, Craze (Yure Covich), in a deluded daze that his divorced spouse is still an open house for him.

Rabbit (Josef Bur), nick named for his root rodent proclivity, deluded that his wife is clueless to his shagging shenanigans.

George (Troy Harrison) in denial of a new love, still devastated at the dysfunction of his previous relationship and the perceived abduction of his child, taken across the Tasman to a new life devoid of dad.

And Runt (Thomas Campbell) the literal of the litter, a frustrated follower, aware of his own discrepancies, happy to abrogate his responsibilities.

Mateship, masculinity and misogyny is the focus as four, near forty year old, phallus centric fellas flounder in the forged conceit of male entitlement.

They all love women they say, they all love their mums. But when one character depicts admiration for his dad because he hurled his mum across the room, he is not chastised, and no one is chastened. Blokes are supposed to be the boss, and for these blokes being a man is being a hard man, a literal and metaphorical hard-on, homo-erectus in his most primitive and primeval state.

Ugly topics couched in poetic language are part of a long list of literary legacy in English language plays from Shakespeare to Berkoff and Patricia Cornelius' script is right up there among the very best of them.

Her writing has a rhythm, energy and truth that wields unbridled power and in the hands of these actors packs a powerful performance punch. The brash playfulness of boys will be boys banter mutates into male malevolence towards women. It's a chilling achievement, spotlighting how these attitudes can be fostered and festered, how predatory and punishing actions be accomplished by men who attest emphatic belief that they love women but join in on pack mentality misogyny.

Director Tim Roseman has marshalled superb work from his collaborators, the aforementioned cast and production designer as well as movement director, Julia Cotton, lighting designer, Sian James-Holland, assisted by Cameron Menzies, and composer and sound designer, Nate Edmondson.

Unflinching, uncompromising, unpalatable, unforgettable, Savages is a remarkable and searing theatrical experience.


Darlinghurst Theatre Company presents
SAVAGES
by Patricia Cornelius

Director Tim Roseman

Venue: Eternity Playhouse, Darlinghurst
Dates: 6 April – 1 May 2016
Tickets: $45 – $30
Bookings: www.darlinghursttheatre.com | 02 8356 9987





Most read Sydney reviews

  • Dancing at Lughnasa | New Theatre
    Dancing at Lughnasa | New Theatre
    A gifted embroider of words, Friel combines soft lyricism and hard meaning in his play, a tragical comical historical pastoral on a spree and spoiling for a spirited spar.
  • Stage Kiss | New Theatre
    Stage Kiss | New Theatre
    There’s a palpable playfulness to these performances, disciplined, drilled and delightful. There’s fire, bite and fun and lots of kissing.
  • The First Murder | Pinchgut Opera
    The First Murder | Pinchgut Opera
    In the care of Pinchgut Opera’s director, Erin Helyard, this music, formulaic as it indeed is in some respects, sprang off the page into an experience rich in emotions.
  • My Brilliant Career | Sydney Theatre Company
    My Brilliant Career | Sydney Theatre Company
    Based on an Australian literature classic, My Brilliant Career is destined to become an Australian theatrical classic.
  • Sistren | Griffin Theatre Company
    Sistren | Griffin Theatre Company
    Iolanthe and Janet Anderson work in cosmic, comedic accord, characterisation charismatic, timing impeccable, delivery precise, together a tour de force that ascends the cliché.

More from this author