Molly's Shoes

Molly's Shoes

Contents

Molly's Shoes

Molly's Shoes is an original stage production written by Alex Vickery-Howe. It was commissioned by the Independent Arts Foundation through Carclew Youth Arts and first staged by Accidental Productions at the Bakehouse Theatre, Adelaide South Australia from May - July 2011.[1]

The title refers to "shoes young people often try to fill."[2]

Plot

Molly's Shoes depicts a narrative split across time. Physics students David Moss and Elspeth Straun fall in love between 1997 and 1999 but their relationship fractures into the new millennium as their belief systems begin to clash under the critical eye of their senior lecturer, Professor Molly Taffy. In the near future, an older David and Elspeth are reunited in time to watch Molly degenerate into Alzheimer’s, forced to make ethical decisions as the moment dictates.

ACT I – CLINGING TO A GRAIN OF SAND

David Moss begins his first year studies, as a science enthusiast and self-confessed geek. Early in his first week he meets Elspeth Straun. There is chemistry between the two students, despite Elspeth’s fiery temper and spontaneous, live-for-the-moment edge occasionally clashing with David’s self-consciously analytical worldview.

Their lecturer, acid-tongued Molly Taffy, goads David into reaching his full potential as a student, accidentally setting him on a path of religious investigation and putting him at odds with Elspeth.

The climax comes with the sudden suicide of Molly’s husband and her rejection of her now indoctrinated pupil, as well as the split between the young David and Elspeth.

In the present, an older David nurses a frail Molly, and awaits Elspeth’s return to his life.

ACT II – ROSE COLOURED SKY

Elspeth, now in her early 40’s, arrives at David’s doorstep, to assist him in caring for Molly. The two rekindle their old flame, as Molly slips further away from reality.

David’s motivation for calling Elspeth is revealed; he wants to end Molly’s suffering and needs Elspeth, the non-believer, to do it. When she rejects him, David is forced to explore his personal ethics.

The past reaches into the present as the older David is confronted by the memories of the younger Elspeth and younger Molly, bringing him to his final decision.


The play explores the concepts we cling to – academia, religion, love – in order to define the world and our own place in it, ultimately presenting a world without clear answers save those we make for ourselves. [3]

Style

Molly's Shoes is a piece of contemporay theatre that employs surrealism, theatrical illusion and direct address. Characters frequently break the fourth wall to convey their feelings to the audience and the action alternates between time periods, creating parallel narratives. The scenes are short and the dialogue is fast-paced.

Original South Australian Production

Cast

David Moss: Tim Smith / John Maurice
Elspeth Straun: Rachel Jones / Joanne Hartstone
Molly Taffy: Katie O'Reilly / Bridget Walters

Crew

Director: Joh Hartog
Designer: Tammy Boden
Lighting: Stephen Dean

Critical Reception

The debut production earned many positive reviews. Critic Barry Lenny from Glam Adelaide[4] described Molly's Shoes as an "intellectually and emotionally engaging new play" that has "everything going for it", reserving special praise for Bridget Walters as the elder Molly:

Even if everything else had been a disaster, instead of the huge success that it actually is, it would still have been worth the price of a ticket to see her performance as the older Molly. As Walters slips from the completely lucid woman, as sharp as ever Molly was, into the vague and forgetful Molly whose brain is atrophying, it is reflected in every fibre of her. Her demeanour changes dramatically and we can literally see the light go out in her eyes. Her great talent and wealth of experience is indisputable in this performance, as it has been in so many others before.

The Australian[5] declared Molly's Shoes "an impressive next step" for the company while Aaron Nash of DB Magazine[6] pointed out that the debate between science and faith was well-balanced in the production:

'Molly's Shoes' avoids the clunky, heavy-handed preaching which tends to plague productions with this sort of subject matter and, instead, is an honest, insightful and (perhaps, most importantly) unbiased reflection on the relationship between these seemingly disparate worlds.

Nash also praised the cast:

The performances are all extremely fine, with particular mention to Bridget Walters who plays the aging Molly with equal amounts of biting wit and vulnerability. The only minor gripe is how David came to adopt a British accent in the transition from being played by Tim Smith to John Maurice but, given the quality of their performances, this is easily forgivable. Rachel Jones and Joanne Hartstone play the young and middle-aged Elspeth, respectively, with a wellspring of warmth and truth, whilst Katie O'Reilly is truly frightening as the young Molly who sees only reason - and herself - as mattering.

He concludes that the play "may be philosophical in nature but it refuses to beat you over the head with its meaning or agenda. It simply presents us with the questions that we will continue to ask throughout our entire lives and presents them in a way that tickles both our curiosities and our funny bones."

Although the mainstream state and national press was complimentary, theatrical blogger Stephen Davenport found the show "confounding" and "an inspired, though garbled hotchpotch of themes" a view contradicted by fellow blogger Kryztoff Raw:[7]

To be sure, this is a very modern style play; thoughtful, well researched in its writing, coherent if always demanding of one’s attention and compelling. Given its scope, Molly’s Shoes needs to be recognised for that brilliance alone.

Jamie Wright[8] from the online publication Adelaide Theatre Guide expressed the opposite opinion to Davenport, rather than finding it "confounding", Wright felt that the show's treatment of its core themes was simplistic:

Weaving together emotional and intellectual threads like these is a tough ask and while this production succeeds with the former, the latter aspect is less satisfying, as there isn't enough time to give the complex issues the treatment they deserve. As a result, we end up with less than the amount needed for a real examination but more than that required to provide depth to the characters. This flaw, though, only detracts somewhat from an otherwise clever, funny and genuinely touching production.

Wright also noted that:

Tim Smith and Rachel Jones play late-1990s David and Elspeth with energy, intensity and humour, contrasting well against Katie O'Reilly's grounded, sensible Professor Taffy. Present-day David and Elspeth are played by John Maurice and Joanne Hartstone; both do well with the more serious tone and briefer appearances. Bridget Walters, as present-day Professor Taffy, gets the best material – both comic and tragic – and is excellent at both.

The debut production created a great deal of debate among members of the audience. On the company's website[9], playwright Vickery-Howe described the extreme reactions:

I’ve been labelled a christian, an atheist, pro/anti-euthanasia, pro/anti-abortion and pro/anti-feminism, as well as brilliant, clichéd, absorbing, confounding, inspired and disappointing, all in one week. Who am I?

Actress Rachel Jones had a similar experience:

It wasn't until we were performing on opening night and heard audible gasps from the audience that I realised the extent to which this play could affect people. To me, the fact that people had such strong reactions to the production is a sign of success. It forced all of us, both the actors onstage and the audience in the auditorium, to question our own beliefs.

The play was nominated for the Adelaide Critics' Circle Awards 2011[10]

References

  1. ^ "Molly's Shoes" at Ausstage: Gateway to the Australian Performing Arts
  2. ^ Louise Nunn "In Step For World Premiere", Sunday Mail May 21
  3. ^ Adelaide Press Release
  4. ^ Barry Lenny, Glam Adelaide, (Review of) Molly's Shoes, May 24, 2011
  5. ^ Murray Bramwell, Review, The Australian, May 24
  6. ^ Aaron Nash, Review, Db Magazine, May 19th - June 4th
  7. ^ Molly’s Shoes, Kryztoff Raw: Reviewing Adelaide
  8. ^ Adelaide Theatre Guide
  9. ^ Accidental Productions
  10. ^ Samela Harris, The Advertiser, November 19th, 2011

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