Who Wants to be 100? Anyone Who’s 99

SKY CITY Theatre, Auckland

07/06/2007 - 30/06/2007

Production Details


By Roger Hall
Directed by Alison Quigan

AUCKLAND THEATRE COMPANY


Following the tradition of Taking Off, Middle Age Spread, Take a Chance on Me and Spreading Out comes Roger Hall’s latest comedy: Who Wants to be 100? (Anyone Who’s 99).  Laugh. Cry. Take Notes.

Auckland Theatre Company warms this winter up with a heart-racing new comedy by New Zealand’s best-loved playwright, Roger Hall:  Who Wants to be 100? Anyone Who’s 99, on stage at SKYCITY Theatre from June 7-30.

Welcome to the Regina Rest Home where the old boys network is alive and kicking with a retired Q.C., an ex-All Black, a former university professor and a famous potter amongst the residents. Restless, irrepressible and determined to enjoy their twilight years they declare war on illness, old age, guilty wives, greedy off-spring and the quality of the catering!

Directed by Alison Quigan (Mum’s Choir, Shortland Street) and starring leading New Zealand actors Mark Hadlow, Raymond Hawthorne, George Henare and Ray Henwood as you’ve never quite seen them before, Who Wants To Be 100? is classic kiwi comedy about that place everyone dreads – the rest home.

With his finger on the pulse of the baby boomer generation’s deepest concerns Who Wants To Be 100? is vintage Roger Hall comedy, says actor Raymond Hawthorne:
Four old men sit out their days and amuse themselves – and the audience – regaling each other with their colourful lives as they lead a hilarious crusade against the inevitable – it’s gilt-edged Roger Hall at his best.”

Celebrated for guiding the baby bomber generation through the share-market crash, middle-age and retirement, Halls says it was only a matter of time before he set a play in a rest home: Rest homes have become something of a hot topic as they move from being run by church and charitable organisations to being run solely for profit“, says Hall.I visited a few homes and talked to some staff and some residents but the play is almost as much about those who have to place their loved one in a home, as it is about those already in there.”

Continuing a long tradition of presenting Hall’s plays, Auckland Theatre Company Artistic Director, Colin McColl, says Who Wants to be 100? touches on the pleasures and pitfalls of rest-home living perfectly:This wonderful play addresses yet another serious issue creeping up on my generation – old age – and in true Roger Hall style, he shows us the way with humour, pathos and some very useful facts!”, says McColl.

Back in the Director’s chair for this production, Alison Quigan is thrilled to be working with such a hot team: “I have New Zealand’s greatest playwright and four of the most experienced and exciting actors in the country- whipping these old boys into shape is a challenge I’m looking forward to!”, says Quigan.

Who Wants to be 100? Anyone Who’s 99 promises audiences tears, laughter, and even (yes!) lust.

Who Wants To Be 100? Anyone Who’s 99 premieres at SKYCITY Theatre from June 7-30.  Book through Ticketek 09 307 5000 or online at www.atc.co.nz


Cast

Kate Louise Elliott - Elaine / Debbie / Sharon / Gloria
Mark Hadlow - Leo Maddox

Raymond Hawthorne - Charles Benson
George Henare - Alan Webster

Ray Henwood - Edwin Mathers
Catherine Wilkin - Sarah / Audrey / Mary

Production
Set Design David Thornley
Lighting Design Andrew Malmo
Costume Design Judith Crozier
Sound Design Jordan Greatbatch
Production Manager Mark Gosling
Technical Manager Bonnie Burrill
Senior Stage Manager Aileen Robertson
Assistant Stage Manager Mitchell Turei
Lighting Operator Robert Hunte
Sound Operator Ben Stockwell
Set Construction 2CONSTRUCT
Costume Construction The Costume Studio
Props Master Bec Ehlers 


Theatre ,


Male characters resonate best

Review by Kate Ward-Smythe 12th Jun 2007

All the Hall marks are there: perceptive snapshots of ordinary lives, recognisable characters and easily digestible humour. But perhaps because his latest comedy is based in a rest home, and death comes to us all, Who Wants To Be 100? has a more serious undertone than many of Hall’s predecessors (A Way Of Life perhaps being a notable exception).

I mean in no way to suggest that Roger Hall fans and followers will be disappointed or searching for laughs, as palatable jokes dot the script throughout. However, as Hall presents the reality of four mature men living in a New Zealand retirement village, he pushes issues to the forefront such as violence against the elderly by staff; loneliness; abandonment; comradeship; the inevitable fear attached to involuntarily relinquishing control of your body and mind through age; and how age will undo us all, no matter how it happens and who we used to be.

As a result, Who Wants To Be 100? has more grit and emotional pull than the pink and frothy publicity material suggests.

While Hall includes the perspectives and challenges of wives, partners and various female rest home staff, it is his writing of the four male leads, which resonates best. He realistically articulates Kiwi men’s issues. For example, as one character grapples with pain in his prostate, he hisses, "There’s no designer t-shirt for us."

Some of our industry’s finest and most popular actors play the male leads, which will help ensure the success of this production.

Ray Henwood and George Henare are well cast and strong. Henwood brings subtle depth to Edwin, once a successful QC, big hearted but flawed, who has lost his nerve and checked himself in. Henare, whose womanising character Alan may have been inspired by a well-known 1970s iconic Coromandel hippy potter, immerses himself beautifully in the confusing and disturbing world of Alzheimer’s.

Mark Hadlow, playing ex-All Black Leo, while not always physically and vocally true to his character’s age, predictably delivers excellent comic timing and is a scene-stealer during lighter moments in the evening. (In particular as he reveals Leo’s uncompromising competitive edge).

Raymond Hawthorne gives a heart rending performance playing stroke victim Charles. He weaves effortlessly between the world of his physical constraint and the world in his mind, where he is still an articulate, proud history professor. Hawthorne gives excellent voice to Hall’s insight into the frustration of not being able to communicate basic needs, and the indignation of incontinence and reliance on those around him, an excellent mind trapped in a useless body.

Playing various family members, including Alan’s long-suffering wife, Catherine Wilkin does her best work alongside Henare. Kate Louise Elliott is bubbly as she performs the roles of rest home staff, but is unnecessarily obvious and heavy handed as Sharon, the bullying night nurse.

Some of director Alison Quigan’s creative and technical team add little to embellish the central performances, other than to distract unnecessarily.

The set is limiting and static, in that it is designed so that the most important area, the day lounge, has little depth, meaning all the ensemble scenes are performed in a narrow line. In addition, the four bedrooms behind the lounge are so far upstage, that individual scenes are less engaging. Skycity Theatre is a big space – it is difficult to create intimacy between the actors and the audience as is it is. Finally, the abstract statement of the wallpaper (grey and wrinkly) is at odds with the realistic furniture and fittings it surrounds. However, I did like the way David Thornley designed the 3 corridors so that they gave the appearance of a giant arrow, pointing at the audience, as if to say, "You’re next."

The sound design by Jordan Greatbatch is colourless smooth jazz to die to, yet the play is anything but a smooth ride.

The other disappointment of the evening is the final scene. After the cast sing a sentimental round of ‘Abide With Me’, to accompany one of their group’s ascent towards the bright white lights at the pearly gates, Hall shies away from a more poignant end, by finishing on a witty one-liner.

Comments

Paul Baker October 6th, 2007

I saw the Court Theatre production, or at least the first half. Perhaps I'm not entitled to an opinion having only seen half a play. But this is why I walked out: stereotypical characters, lazy dialogue, stilted monologues, easy jokes, continual nudges and winks to the audience and no plot. It was all tell, not show, perhaps inevitable when of the four main characters two are unable to coherently communicate. A cramped set made it appear that the men slept in a dormitory. The script was too obviouslyand mechanically ticking off age/rest-home issues as it progressed. Excellent acting, though.

Insider007 June 13th, 2007

To Be honest it is the one show when I looked at The Court Theatre's New season I wasn't too excited about, it just doesn't seem to exciting, Am I the only person in New Zealand theatre audiences that doesn't "Rate" Roger Hall?

Seth Simmons June 13th, 2007

I believe the show was miked in response to requests from ATC patrons in the past who have been unable to hear in this venue - to my surprise I didn't mind that aspect of the show. Overall though, while the acting was good I found the script to be well below Hall's usual standards. Particularly galling was the amount of times something interesting was about to happen and the action dies in it's tracks to be covered by a character relating events some time later. One of the first lessons I ever learnt about playwrighting was 'show don't tell'. And that was in Roger Hall's own book...oh well. Maybe, in my late 20s, I'm too young for this play???

Michael Wray June 13th, 2007

Yes, definitely more than just a comedy. It is very dark at times. This is not a criticism, but a compliment - I hadn't expected such emotional depth. I hadn't been to the Sky Theatre before. As you mention Kate, it lacks intimacy. It took me several scenes to get used to the actors being amplified. Is this normal practice for this venue or an anticipation of a harder-of-hearing audience demographic? It will be a much more enjoyable play when it comes to Circa or Downstage in Wellington. Oh and one correction to something Roger Hall has Charles say. Abide With Me continues to be sung before the FA Cup Final. There was one season in the 1970s where the FA felt it was outdated and dropped it. It was reinstated the following year after fans protested against the change.

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