AND NO MORE SHALL WE PART

Fortune Theatre, Dunedin

28/10/2016 - 06/11/2016

Production Details



Sophisticated storytelling envelopes the questions surrounding end-of-life choices

Tom Holloway’s beautiful play is an uplifting testament to the power of love and the indomitability of the human spirit. Don and Pam have lived a long and successful marriage together and they are still very much in love. The kids have grown up and moved on, but now, suddenly, rather than suffer a prolonged cancerous death, she wants to leave him – or that’s how it seems to him, at least. Pam is ill and makes a heartbreaking decision. 

And No More Shall We Part looks at what happens to a relationship when end-of-life choice comes into the room. It is told with the sophisticated rhythm and often awkward and humorous genuine banter that scripts seldom offer, particularly when addressing such an emotional and controversial topic.

The New Zealand Euthanasia debate:

The NZ Health Select Committee is undertaking an investigation into public attitude towards legislation, which would permit medically assisted dying in the event of terminal illness or an irreversible condition that makes life unbearable. New Zealanders are experiencing an increase in people needing palliative care and enduring slow and often painful deaths.  David Seymore’s recent ‘legalize euthanasia’ bill, which specifically promotes assisted dying based on a personal choice, is currently topical to an increasing number of affected families. Recent NZ polls showed that 75% of kiwis support voluntary euthanasia, and while Prime Minister John Key has expressed his support for the bill, his deputy Bill English is staunchly opposed.

This exceptionally-written play will provoke thought and discussion around this topic which is currently the subject of many verbal submission hearings. The timing of this production is very pertinent in New Zealand today, and actors Julie Edwards and Alan Palmer “feel so privileged” to have been granted the license to produce Tom Holloway’s Award-winning play, and look forward to this NZ premiere season. The production is to be directed by Lisa Warrington. And No More Shall We Part was performed by Griffin Theatre Company (2011) Sydney and London’s Hampstead Theatre (2012), and recently enjoyed its US premiere at The Williamstown Theatre Festival in Massachusetts. Tom Holloway received the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards Louis Esson Prize for Drama and the 2010 AWGIE for Best Stage Play.

And No More Shall We Part
Fortune Theatre, Dunedin
28 October – 6 November
Most shows at 7:30pm; Sundays 4pm, Tuesday 6pm
(No show Monday 31 October)
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Don: Alan Palmer
Pam: Julie Edwards

Lighting design: Stephen Kilroy
Set Design: Peter King  
Stage Manager: Paul Metreyeon
Production Manager: Ellie Swann  


Theatre ,


Engaging, disarmingly real, bittersweet

Review by Reuben Hilder 29th Oct 2016

‘Thought-provoking’ is a term I find dubious because it can be used to describe virtually any piece of art. In the past, I have myself been guilty of throwing it around when I can’t think of anything better to say about a work. This is not the case when I say that And No More Shall We Part is one of the most thought-provoking works to be produced in Dunedin in recent years. It will genuinely have you pondering the questions it raises long after you have left the theatre. 

And No More Shall We Part deals with themes of love, sickness, death and euthanasia, but given the weight of its subject matter retains a remarkable lightness. Everything about the production is understated, from the script to the acting to the minimal set, and this works wonderfully to develop its themes with subtlety and nuance. Tragic though the play undeniably is, it never tries to force tragedy down its audience’s throats, preferring a slow-burning approach that gradually works its way under your skin.

Alan Palmer and Julie Edwards play married couple Don and Pam, who must re-evaluate everything when Pam’s terminal illness leads her to seek a better way to end her life and the decisions they must make put immense strain on their relationship. Everything about the play’s message relies on the portrayal of this turmoil and the duo – who together comprise the newly-formed Dean & Ella Productions – pull it off flawlessly.

Both approach their roles with remarkable restraint and create characters so richly detailed and realised they truly feel like people you could meet in your everyday life. The pair have significant chemistry, making their working off each other a sight to behold. They manage to find as much humour in the lines as they do heartbreak and this is really what brings the play to life and gives the play it’s very human immediacy.

The production does suffer a little on the pacing front. While for the most part its gradual progression is a point in favour of its sensitive tackling of serious issues, the play is also fond of protracted silences in which the action grinds to a complete stop. This is actually an effective technique – it builds the tension and allows the audience time to reflect on the gravity of what they have just witnessed – but it would benefit from the same restraint that was applied to all other elements of the production. Instead, the play feels like it is jumping on every opportunity to have one character leave for several minutes to make a cup of tea while the other just sits on stage, and what was initially tense eventually becomes merely tiresome.

That being said, And No More Shall We Part is still an engaging and disarmingly real bittersweet play and I await with much anticipation Dean & Ella Productions’ next offering. 

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