Showing posts with label PRIVATE RESISTANCE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PRIVATE RESISTANCE. Show all posts

Sunday, May 06, 2012

PRIVATE RESISTANCE


PRIVATE RESISTANCE
Chappel and Wakes Colne

05.05.12

The restored Victorian Goods Shed at Chappel is not an ideal theatre space: no proper blackout, draughty, with noisy heaters never really beating the chill.

But what an evocative setting for this what-if World War II tale; a guard's waggon stage left, and over our heads, an old station clock, relentlessly, defiantly ticking away the time [our time, not Jerry's alien daylight saving].

Private Resistance tells the story of the Auxiliary Units, small bands of local men [and boys] who would harass the foe from within, attacking from behind the lines, keeping Britain fighting while we waited for the Yanks to finish off Pacific business and ride to our rescue.

The railway plays a key role in the story: the "only real noise" to ruffle this rural idyll twenty miles north of Chelmsford, transporting "liberated" art works and Jewish families, and the focus of the sabotage for the May Day Uprising of 1943. What would the Suffolk maquis have made of the viaduct just up the line …

This is my third look at Ivan Cutting's Home Front alternative history. The ensemble playing is, if anything, still stronger, with glances and half-formed sentences conveying so much. And the second half, which seemed a little wordy at Wivenhoe, now seems an intriguing exploration of the nature of occupation, of collaboration, of gender roles and family ties. The final sequence, with the only survivor looking back at those dark, dangerous days, is a moving coda to this story of a very British guerilla war.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

PRIVATE RESISTANCE


PRIVATE RESISTANCE
Eastern Angles at Brentwood Theatre
10.04.12

"Keep Calm and Carry On" – hard to miss these days, but intended for the darker days of a Nazi invasion, together with "Freedom Is In Peril, Defend It With All Your Might" used in Fabrice Serafino's ingenious set design. And in a memorable coup de theatre, a light box shows us the resistance bunker, the brutal truth behind the slogan.
This is very British guerilla warfare; its struggles, and the stresses of the Home Front, are cleverly combined in the story of an unconventional extended family. Young Wilf [Fred Lancaster], keen on cricket and cycling, motherless, his father at the front, lives with his aunt [Frances Marshall] whose doctor husband is a POW. Her brother-in-law [Matt Addis] will be the Resistance commander, and he recruits the local gamekeeper [Phil Pritchard]. The war brings two outsiders to the village – Prue [Bishanyia Vincent] a young ATS girl, and Alan, a freedom fighter from up north [Pritchard again] who will galvanize sleepy Suffolk for the May uprising of 1943.
Ivan Cutting's narrative cleverly combines fact with conjecture, delivering a chilling alternative history alongside the six human stories.
Naomi Jones's engaging production tracks their developing characters as the calendar pages turn, with some wonderfully moving scenes - most effectively when they recall their last moments, with evocative word pictures of firing squad, hospital ward, wheat fields and the wide Suffolk sky.
production photo: Mike Kwasniak

Sunday, February 19, 2012

PRIVATE RESISTANCE


PRIVATE RESISTANCE
Eastern Angles
at The William Loveless Hall, Wivenhoe

18.02.12

Still standing, resolutely confronting the invader from the East, pill boxes all across East Anglia. But facing the wrong way, it turned out, when the barge-borne Nazi invasion finally came from the Southern ports.
At least that's the alternative future graphically portrayed in Ivan Cutting's new play for Eastern Angles, now embarked on its region-wide tour.

Private Resistance tells the story of the Auxiliary Units, small bands of local men [and boys] who would harass the foe from within, slowing the advance of Operation Sealion, keeping Britain fighting while we waited for the Yanks to finish off Pacific business and ride to our rescue.

Civilians, meanwhile, were exhorted to Keep Calm and Carry On, by a poster now ubiquitous. But there were two other slogans, also printed against the possibility of invasion, of which "Freedom Is In Peril, Defend It With All Your Might" is used in Fabrice Serafino's ingenious set design.

This very British guerilla warfare, and the stresses of the Home Front, are cleverly combined in the story of an unconventional extended family. Young Wilf [Fred Lancaster], keen on cricket and cycling, motherless, his father at the front, lives with his aunt [Frances Marshall] whose doctor husband is a POW. Her brother-in-law [Matt Addis] will be the commander of the Unit, and recruits the local gamekeeper [Phil Pritchard]. The war brings two outsiders to the village – Prue [Bishanyia Vincent] a young ATS girl, and Alan, a freedom fighter from up north [Pritchard again] who will galvanize sleepy Suffolk for the May uprising of 1943.
The narrative cleverly combines history with conjecture – the cattle trucks from Manchester to Harwich, the Government in Canadian exile, a Vichy independence for Scotland. And details add authenticity – the John Bull printing outfit, the vintage cricket bat, the crystal set. The costumes, too, had a period precision – the schoolboy, the Land Girl, the revolutionary.

Naomi Jones's engaging production tracks the developing characters as the calendar pages turn, with some wonderfully moving moments – the two women giggling at their first encounter, and much later dancing the Beguine. And the pacy panic as uniforms are burnt, the BBC goes off the air [later to re-surface as Free BBC in Manchester], and church bells toll the invasion. Perhaps most effective of all, the six characters recalling their last moments, with evocative word pictures of wheat fields and the wide Suffolk sky.
But as the characters observe, it's often looks rather than words that convey our feelings, and it's not always Jerry, it's sometimes us – heartlessly handing over refugees, for instance. But who's to say how we might have acted, in this alternative England, with the enemy at our door.

This gripping drama is an ideal vehicle for sharing a little-known chapter of our history, Churchill's underground units which were never spoken of, even fifty years later. Not many of those resistance fighters, who stood ready in 1940, survive now; soon the few remaining Operational Bases and the pill boxes will be the only witnesses to this very secret war.

production photograph by Mike Kwasniak