Strong and intense - great ! here's my review for Sydney Arts Guide http://www.sydneyartsguide.com.au/theatre-excentrique-presents-beirut-adrenaline-downstairs-belvoir-street/#more-33861
The intimate space of the tiny downstairs theatre at Belvoir Street
has been transformed to become 1986 war time Beirut in this mesmerizing
current production. As directed excellently by Anna Jahjah this is BEIRUT ADRENALINE’s Australian premiere as well as being its first production in English.
Set design by Clarisse Ambroselli is a bullet holed
scarred wall which also doubles as a projection screen with portable
props such as folding chairs, tables, mattresses…The sparse minimal
staging allows for fluid scene changes and wonderfully impressive
lighting by Larry Kelly.
The play is set in war torn Lebanon in 1986 and we follow the lives
of the Daher family , ordinary civilians struggling to survive with
constant power water and phone cuts among other things plus the ever
present threatening sound of gunfire, sirens and bombs. They are
separated by the war. Zyad and his sister Mona manage to escape to
Paris, but their brother Marwan is trapped in Beirut. There is a sense
of constant stress and pressure.
The play flows between Paris and Beirut with several of the cast –
who all give passionately committed performances – playing dual roles.
It can perhaps be confusing but the performers work together
marvelously. The challenging, informative script is at times extremely
intense and searing, whilst at other times it is wistful, dreamlike and
romantic.
The play begins with Zyad, an academic, ( Eli Saad) brainstorming
aloud about his proposal for a book on the causes of instability in
Lebanon as Mona (Sana’a Shaik), his challenging, rebellious younger
sister caustically relays a friend’s statement that as a Lebanese she is
“a potential terrorist”.
The play then jumps to Beirut we meet Marwan (also played by Saad ,
with a cap on backwards) who has moved into a flat in Beirut with his
Tante Najat (Danielle Dona), who lives mostly in a dream world of a more
peaceful elegant past. Marwan tries to keep himself going by jogging,
tentatively dreaming of a future in which he will become an elite
athlete. His neighbour, beautiful Rima (Neveen Hanna in a mesmerizing
performance), envisages her small balcony as an art gallery in which her
plans to hold an independent and free art exhibition will come to
fruition.
Rima and Marwan, in a delicate scene that is a high point in the
productioin, meet in the unconfined no man’s land of the middle space
and languorously dance of living in a more graceful, peaceful and
romantic future.
Rima manages to send her war-obsessed brother, Toufic (darkly
handsome Mansoor Noor who gives a splendid performance as the smooth,
suave, Steve McQueen gun obsessed guy from his tense , electric opening
entrance) to Paris to survive. His breakdown is shattering. Ultimately
Zyad is unable to stop spirited Mona from going back to the Lebanon she
loves.
Tall, bald Eli Saad is consistently impressive in
the dual roles of Zayad and Marwan. In the role of bespectacled lecturer
Zayad he has the long closing monologue that takes us back in time over
the millennium covering the history of the war torn region. We ask
ourselves – how can the country’s leaders make things better? Could
things be handled differently?
Alternating between Lebanon and France, between the Orient and the
Western world , BEIRUT ADRENALINE is a questioning, quite moving piece
of theatre attempting to analyse the various ways we as humans deal with
tragedy . While it is set 30 years ago it is extremely relevant and
contemporary now. We see how people endure the disintegration and
fragmentation of their homeland and struggle to hope for the future.
Theatre Excentrique’s production of BEIRUT ADRENALINE by
Hala Ghosn and Jalie Barcilon with translation by Anna Jahjah and Kris Shalvey runs at Belvoir St Downstairs until August 14.
http://www.theatrexcentrique.com/
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