JOINING BATTLE ALONE
Category: Theatre(abridged)
THE GOOD WOMAN OF WAPPING
Wapping is a relatively small, well-defined area of London on the north bank of the Thames beside Tower Bridge. Once it was a tightly-knit community of dockers and their families.
In the last ten years it has been devastated. As dock work has been phased out of the upper reaches the people have been shoved out and speculators descended to snap up the rich pickings of real estate.
This is the- context , in which Shane Connaughton — author of “George Davis is innocent, OK?” — has set his loosely-based resetting of Brecht’s The Good Woman of Setzuan, which he also directs.
Here, the “Good Woman,” a middle-class teacher from Hampstead, decides to join the ranks of the homeless to help them, and, by good works, put an end to their misery.
Gradually her frustration with the apathy of the oppressed, and the corruption between the town hall and the speculators, becomes more intense.
She transforms herself into a fictitious brother and, by crafty use of the welfare state, hustles the bunch of derelicts she is squatting with into a rag trade production unit.
Eventually she relinquishes this attempt to expose capitalist exploitation and turns to thoughts of individual direct action. .
You could blow up a strategic installation, she says, then distribute leaflets explaining to people why it was necessary.
I will not divulge the play’s ending, however, suffice it to say, the conclusion is bleak and without hope.
Given the character and role of the “Good Woman” this is perhaps inevitable, certainly indicating that the individual can achieve nothing in a battle with the state.
If this is the author’s intention, all well and good. But whether this is the best manner in which to raise the question, and people’s consciousness at this time, is open to question.
There are many well-acted roles and the humour of the play is its central strength.
But when the play turns to seriousness it tends to topple into melodrama partly because the cast overplays the decibel level. This unevenness may, of course, sort itself out before the play comes off on April 24.
The ambiguity of the politics is another matter, always a tricky business in drama. Shane Connaughton’s powers of wit and irony suggest he is capable of a powerful, sustained piece utilising these talents.
(Morning Star, March, 1976)