Mending Fences: a difficult Norman Foster play produces unexpected emotional depths!

Mending Fences: a difficult Norman Foster play produces unexpected emotional depths!

 

Mending Fences   Teal Cochrane and Bob Lackey  Photo Maria Vartanova

Mending Fences is a most beautifully constructed play that appears to concern a  dysfunctional  family relationship dominated by an apparently angry, self centred patriarch who has given rise to a tortured young son and stubborn individuals who  will have to learn how to listen to each other to eventually resolve their situation.  As events unfold, we realize  there are deeply underlying misunderstandings, hurtful encounters, difficult memories and sad events in the past that have given rise to much pain and it is all unravelled magnificently by Norm Foster whose talent for dialogue is astounding!  Such quick wit, such razor-sharp responses and searing one-liners. He makes us laugh when we feel we should not be laughing and that is the secret to this admirable play. Plus, there is Bob Lackey as the  sullen, apparently indifferent Harry who stifles any emotional connection with a verbal jab and an unexpected reaction that shocks and surprises us.  The actor’s  impeccable timing, fast repartee, and complete sullen naturalism produces a performance that is almost stunning and suits to perfection  Foster’s  quick wit,  astounding one-liners, slip of the tongue insults and on going jokes about sex that pepper the  play, sending it into an encounter of unexpected emotional depth. This is a brilliant performance!

A Saskatchewan farmer who has gone from one semi-tragedy in his life to another, meets his  son Drew at the train station for the first time in 13 years. Why has Drew suddenly returned and what will the consequences be  on the family?  The arrival of this  unexpected  third party suggests a Pinter-like structure  which bodes very well for Foster’s play from the start but of course the son is not an entire stranger  and thus he carries with him much important emotional and psychological baggage which helps the writer and the audience unravel this stage event. Thanks to the deftly staged flashbacks with Barry Sims’ excellent lighting effects and director Barbara Kobolak’s finely  tuned directing of the whole play,  it all works smoothly, even during the most complex moments.

There is a form of  prologue  that sets up Harry’s present situation in life,  plunging us into an ongoing running joke about the meaning of sex  in his new life with Gin (Virginia) his recent girl friend with whom his relationship becomes more problematic but who becomes an  important catalyst as the play develops. Son Drew tries to reach out to the father whom he hasn’t seen in years but whose absence has  clearly been a great hole  in his life .  The young man is  thwarted at every turn by a father who resists any attempt to become closer. Jesse Lalonde as the charming but troubled son also gives an excellent performance who makes his way very delicately, through difficult situations  that reveal his great sadness without his ever going over the top and often without even speaking. His face is extremely expressive and one of the main tools he uses to produce such a  fine sensitive performance  that is beautifully sustained right to the end

It is funny, it is frustrating, it is even uncomfortable at times but it keeps us rivetted to the stage because the situation is so un predictable at first, so disturbing, so annoying and so fascinating.

Act I sets the situation very clearly and it isn’t until Act II that all the truths about this family come crashing through the walls. Drew’s honest questioning forces the memories to return, and we come to understand the source of all the anger, the resentment, the psychological reactions to such things as playing hockey, constant beer drinking, not wanting to fix a broken-down tractor or repairing things at home that aren’t working , symbolic events that reflect much deeper troubles eating away inside these individuals. The title becomes self explanatory.

Teal Cochrane is the feisty girlfriend Gin who nurses her own emotional wounds  but she incarnates  a strong female presence in this crumbling household as she resists all temptations to give in and  create a sense of relief in all this anger.  The actress , who is even given some good Lysistrata lines at one point, shows us just how versatile  she can be although Harry’s rather lightning reactions to her attempts at seduction seem a bit artificial and that whole logic seems a bit out of place at that point but then it was all part of a joke and  the only moment that is not  particularly naturalistic so it became a good form of comic relief.

Cathy Nobleman who plays Harry’s mother was also very convincing but I admit the play fumbles a bit at that point because the time relationship was not at all clear in those later  flashbacks.  I assumed she was Drew’s mother all the way through and not Harry’s mother.  Thus, although the violent scenes with the mother were very well performed and explained much, they did not seem to fit the time frame somehow . It was a clear  problem with the script that the director might have elucidated .On the other hand, Peggy Laverty’s costumes set the time frame very well and choice of music by David Ing and Ben Lagille was appropriate.

Becky Mardell’s set design captured the atmosphere of that older style house perfectly  and because of Kobolak’s directing and Sims’ lighting, the scenography  avoided any awkward lapses in time and gave the show a decidedly polished feel.

Thus  the essential was clear, and the production created a strong emotional  charge that made this evening a rewarding moment of extremely  good theatre.

Mending Fences plays f rom May 29 to June 2019. At the OLT Call 613-233-8948  for tickets

Author Norm Foster

Director  Barbara Kobolak

Set  Becky Mardell

Costumes Peggy Laverty

Props  Fran  Johnson

Cast

Harry   Bob Lackey

Drew   Jesse Lalonde

Teal  Gin

Lori Cathy Nobleman

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