REVIEWS
BOOK REVIEWS - PLAYS
What Lies Before Us - Morris Panych (play) | What Lies Before Us - Morris Panych (play) |
|
|
|
| Written by Deborah Ground Buckner | |
|
Author: Morris Panych Publishing Company: Talonbooks (www.talonbooks.com ) Year: 2007 # of Pages: 96 ISBN #: 978-0-88922-560-2 $15.95 Canada $15.95 USA 3 ˝ stars Reviewer: Deborah Ground Buckner Two-time Governor General's Award-winning playwright Morris Panych's latest offering is What Lies Before Us. Now available in paperback, the play's world premiere was presented by CanStage in a Crow's Theatre production on January 18, 2007. Ambrose and Keating are junior surveyors working for the railroad in the Canadian Rockies in 1885. Alone with just their Chinese servant, Wing, the two men are in a tent waiting for the Major (or is it Godot?). Keating, the earthy Brit, is a thorn in the side of the more intellectual Ambrose, a Scot. Keating passes the time with his guitar, composing terrible songs for the girlfriend he left behind while Ambrose pens his thoughts and observations in a journal. Wing, speaking very little English and understanding even less pops in now and again to receive commands he cannot comprehend, forcing Keating to perform some impossible pantomimes. A rock slide traps the men, and as it becomes more and more doubtful that there will be an escape or a rescue, their conversation runs the gamut of life's great questions. Reminiscent of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot or Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead, the dialogue is both humorous and biting and, ultimately, desperate. There are some wonderful comic moments and a few insightful comments about life and religion. However, when Keating concludes the Major must be on the moon waiting for them or, later, states he has had a dream that he “was an actor in a dreadful play that wouldn't end,” it seems Panych has gone a bit too far in attempting to be clever. As the play ends with Wing in a monologue in Chinese (it is unclear whether the theatre audience will have the sub-titles that are provided in the written script), the audience may well wonder what has been witnessed. |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
|
A 'n' E Vibe is now on Facebook ! |
| ARTS & CULTURE BOOKS FILM MUSIC THEATRE |
| BOOK REVIEWS |
| FILM REVIEWS |
| MUSIC REVIEWS |
| CONCERT REVIEWS |
| THEATRE/ARTS & CULTURE |
| CURRENT BESTSELLERS |
| CURRENT DVD RELEASES |
| CURRENT MUSIC RELEASES |
| VIBING REVIEW |
|
CONGRATULATIONS!
(Wisconsin, USA)
A 'n' E Vibe
Prize Pack WINNER!
Register with A 'n' E Vibe for Contests!
|
|
TOP FICTION: Week Of Sept. 1st
1. THE FORCE UNLEASHED, by Sean Williams 2. SMOKE SCREEN,Sandra Brown 3. THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY, by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows 4. THE BOURNE SANCTION, by Eric Van Lustbader 5. THE HOST,Stephenie Meyer |
NEW FILM RELEASES
2.Hamlet 2
3. I Served The King Of England
4. Disaster Movie
5. College
|
|
Blog it Out!
Made In Where?
By: Kindah Mardam Bey (Ontario Correspondent - Canada) Recently, the question of where exactly my clothing is made has come to my attention. That little equal sign symbol on the back of Coldplay lead singer Chris Martin's hand represents Fair Trade. Which ultimately means that wealthier countries do not bleed third world countries for cheap labour. Seriously, it's a big problem, and while my brief encounter with awareness hit me in the early 1990s with Nike, and then with the outrageous brush with humiliation Kathy Lee Gifford was subjected to (wasn't everyone else doing the same as KLG?), I had little experience with the subject matter. Then the idea of Fair Trade slid slowly into my psyche, and when your High School school-bag toting cousin is more savvy on the subject then you, it's time to strip off and read the damn labels...Read More |
|
Peggoty's
Going to the Stratford Shakespeare Festival?
for the
1-519-527-1072
|