IN THE WARS

BATS Theatre, The Propeller Stage, 1 Kent Tce, Wellington

16/08/2017 - 26/08/2017

Production Details



ACCLAIMED WRITER RETURNS HOME TO PREMIERE NEW PLAY 

In The Wars is the latest work by Paris-based New Zealander Juliet O’Brien, whose critically acclaimed production The Letter Writer captivated audiences at the 2010 New Zealand International Arts Festival.

Award-winning Spanish director Jorge Picó will lead a team that includes celebrated composer and New Zealand Arts Laureate Gareth Farr and expert lighting designer Jennifer Lal. O’Brien and Picó both attended the renowned École Jacques Lecoq in Paris and have gone on to build successful careers as performers, writers, and directors in France.

“I’m thrilled to be opening this play in my hometown and to be back at BATS Theatre,” says O’Brien. “It’s very exciting to be able to bring Jorge with me to work with a highly skilled local team and to introduce Wellington audiences to his work.”

In The Wars will see O’Brien take the stage for the first time in New Zealand in 13 years, having most recently performed in productions of Romeo and Juliet and The Dinner in Paris. O’Brien is a skilled physical theatre performer and an accomplished writer in both English and French.

In The Wars explores stories of courage and love in conflict zones around the world through a series of monologues told from unusual perspectives. Audiences will meet a ring resisting being pillaged, a mother trying to delay her child from being born into a war zone, a Barbie doll struggling under the weight of war-torn rubble, and an Afghan bomb-sniffer dog who has failed in her task and now requires a dog psychologist.

Inspired by true stories, these monologues span a variety of countries and conflicts but for O’Brien it is the moments of tragedy and comedy, cruelty and absurdity that link them all.

“With this work I want to zoom in on moments across time in places as far apart as New Zealand and Palestine, Rwanda and Iraq. It’s an exploration of the effect of war on individuals and families that I believe will surprise, touch, and give hope to audiences.”

In The Wars is supported by theFrance New Zealand Friendship Fund, the Embassy of Spain to New Zealand, and Creative New Zealand.

BATS Theatre, Propeller Stage*
Preview Tues 15 August, 6.30pm
Weds 16 – Sat 26 August, 6.30pm
Full Price $25
Concession Price $18
Preview ticket price $18 
BOOK TICKETS

Accessibility
*The Propeller Stage is fully wheelchair accessible; please contact the BATS Box Office at least 24 hours in advance if you have accessibility requirements so that appropriate arrangements can be made. Read more about accessibility at BATS.



Theatre , Solo ,


1 hr 10 mins

Innovative In The Wars captivating

Review by Ewen Coleman 18th Aug 2017

The idea of creating stories for stage and screen out of war situations is as old as war itself but rarely has it been done as uniquely and innovatively as Juliet O’Brien does in her solo show In The Wars.

The idea for the stories, as described in the programme notes, are that they are all based on true incidents and told through the prism of an object or form caught up in a war.

And the development of these stories and the way O’Brien expresses them in performance makes for a fascinating piece of theatre. O’Brien’s story-telling style is engaging and animated and brings the stories to life, often quite humorously. [More

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Deeply insightful, profoundly humane and not to be missed

Review by John Smythe 18th Aug 2017

We’ve been steeped in war stories since the 2014 centenary of Britain’s declaration of War against Germany in August 1914: ‘The Great War’; ‘The War to End All Wars’. Yeah right. Do I need to list all the wars since? Along with the books, plays, feature films, television dramas and documentaries, the daily news is littered with reports from contemporary war zones, not to mention warnings of impending possibilities.

If you think you’re ‘all warred out’, however, fear not. In The Wars is a completely different take on the theme. Terms like ‘unintended consequences’, ‘innocent victims’, ‘collateral damage’ and even ‘trickle-down effect’ offer themselves as common denominators of the six stories that comprise this insightful solo show. 

The set, by Wai Mihinui, is the first surprise: towering panels clad in high quality wallpaper that denote comfort and elegance – except for the odd angles, judiciously accentuated at appropriate moments by Jennifer Lal’s lighting design. A long, narrow table has heavy, industrial legs at one end and classic turned wooden legs at the other; a plain chair at one end and a fancy one at the other are juxtaposed with an elegant tea set versus a single cup and saucer. 

A glaring but silent brightness punctuates some scene transitions. Does it herald a new dawn of hope or yet another distant missile obliterating its target (or perhaps missing it and striking civilians, as so often happens)? Gareth Farr’s music and soundscape contrast the ebullience of creativeness with the dull and resonant roar of destruction. Paradox riddles this play.

Writer/actor Juliet O’Brien has worked with her co-graduate from École Jacques Lecoq, director Jorge Picó, to develop In The Wars and, unlike The Letter Writer which premiered in France before gracing the 2010 NZ Festival, this world premiere was designed and rehearsed in Wellington.

The six different perspectives, all based on true stories, are ingeniously wrought to challenge our grey-matter before they engage our emotions. A gently rendered physicality informs and distinguishes each iteration, drawing us in without making a spectacle of itself.

Spoiler alert? I cannot discuss this show further without interpreting elements that are revealed subtly and intriguingly, although there is plenty more that I won’t expose. The short message is, go: it’s highly recommended. Read on or not as you choose.

Nothing is more innocent than a soon-to-be born baby. Hasha has gleaned her name from the conversations the “warmths” have in the unknown outside world. We become aware her mother is Yaeda, her father is Yiden and they are in Iraq. And everything that’s happening is ‘normal’: the way it is. In counterpoint to her non-judgemental awareness, we are left to interpret and judge the objective reality of what she is being born into. 

O’Brien personifies a Barbie Doll, donated to war orphans by an American child and brought to Gaza by an NGO, to offer the next telling contrast: broken nails versus smashed buildings; the delicacy of a tea party v the brutality of bulldozers clearing rubble. Again our understanding of the reality differs dramatically from hers (i.e. Barbie’s) and the space between is where we discover, or rather create, the truth.

Two boots represent the deceased father of a Rwandan woman, determined to get him out to the middle of a lake rather than bury him in their war-torn land. The eloquence of the daughter’s language and her abiding love compel us work to comprehend the atrocities that have led to this moment.

Who knew War Dogs sometimes need therapy? Here O’Brien morphs into a somewhat stressed ‘shrink’ who used to work in Cincinnati and now tends a whimpering ‘Hero dog’ somewhere in the Middle East. Then she is floppy-eared ‘Corporal Brenda’ herself, recreating the mine-detection mission that has traumatised her.

Epaulets clipped onto her basic khaki (costume design by Fabienne Desfleches) signifies the next transition into a soldier in Chechnya, although the focus turns to a large gold ring and the quest to win a hand in marriage. The ring’s story harks back to Jason and the Golden Fleece; romance is undercut with mention of a father who taught fear and hatred (plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose); the question arises as to where true value lies … The ring reveals eternal truths as it lies in the ruins of war.

The final and most text-based scene brings a New Zealand perspective to war, wherein one Eileen Ramsay utilises the framed photo of a cavalry man and a carefully preserved jacket to appraise her daughter Rita of people and family histories yet to be recognised by Google. Her heartfelt, “I am so happy that you have never known war” reminds us how lucky we are, at the so-called ‘bottom of the world’ – a state wittily emphasised, to continue the inversions, with a poignant rendition of The Carpenters’ ‘Top Of The World’.

We are a quiet and attentive audience, this second night. If ‘comedy is truth plus pain’ there is plenty of that, in principle, although ‘comedy of insight’ may be a better descriptor. But it’s not geared to make us laugh out loud. Our compulsion to search beyond the deceptively whimsical ‘windows’ – somewhat warped and playfully reflective – tends to divert any rising mirth.

In The Wars is deeply insightful, profoundly humane and not to be missed.

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