Fierce premise hard to buy

Fierce premise hard to buy

Fierce  directed by George Walker.Black Sheep Theatre and Criminal Girlfriends

Two women damaged by life bond as they reveal their secrets in a therapy session fueled by drugs and alcohol.

Intense, occasionally funny, with fluid dialogue, Fierce might work were it not for the fact that one of the women is a psychiatrist. It is extremely difficult in my opinion,  to buy into the possibility that a qualified professional who has met this patient only once before would crumble so quickly.

Surely she would have mustered her defences over years of overcoming her unsavoury past, more than a decade of academic effort to become a licensed medical specialist and subsequent experience in dealing with manipulative patients?

Despite the fact that both performers deliver strong characterizations, they must surmount the challenge of the contrived situation and the fact that, even though it is turned upside down, audiences are basically eavesdropping on a warped therapy session.

Emmelia Gordon is particularly effective as the scrappy patient, Jayne. Making it clear that she is present only because she must comply with a court order to attend therapy sessions, she has made it her business to research the therapist’s background, so that she can gain control of their encounter.

As Maggie, the therapist, Pandora Topp is initially cool, remote and professional, but that façade melts away quickly — as the script requires. It is just too fast to be believable, if the situation could ever seem completely authentic.

Prolific playwright George F. Walker, best known for his fascination with people living on the edge of society, can be relied on to write convincing dialogue and presenting thought-provoking, if not always easy-to-accept, scenarios.

Fierce delivers on the dialogue front and in presenting two interesting back stories. The problems lie in the contrived reverse therapy session and the immediate collapse of a supposedly strong woman.

Fierce continues at the Gladstone to October 13.

Director: George F. Walker

Set: Dave Dawson and Christine Mathieu

Lighting: Steven Lafond and Dave Dawson

 

Cast:

Jayne…………………………Emmelia Gordon.

Maggie……………………….Pandora Topp

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