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Past Productions

Hitchcock Blonde

28 July – 19 August, 2006

ODT

AS SLEEK AND STYLISH AS A BLONDE SHOULD BE
The Hitchcock Blonde is a stereotype: cooly confident, a little smarter than she appears, oddly vulnerable. Terry Johnson's play uses the image of the blonde to examine the idealised world of cinematic creation, and its intersection with the messy unpredicatability of real life.
In 1999 on a Greek Island, a media studies lecturer and a (blonde) student work their way through old reels of Hitchcock film. Forty years earlier, a character named Hitch assesses a woman known only as Blonde as a possible body double for Janet Leigh in the Pyscho shower scene.
Just as Hitch is obsessed with creating flawless screen images, Alex, the lecturer, is obsessed with Hitchcock and every detail of his work.
"To touch," says Hitch at one point, "is to court disaster."
And touching, in this play, means letting go of the perfection of the illusory, and the descent into the disorder of the actual. Having internalised the ideal of the Blonde, both men shrink from contact and the resultant emotional complications.
The Alex/Nicola and Hitch/Blonde stories unfold on different levels of the same set. Suspense, lighting, music, acting styles and film footage from the play's production at the Royal Court Theatre, London, add to he cinematic atmosphere, and there's something very like a horror-film murder.
Patrick Wilson is all portly self-importance, waiting to be punctured by a human touch, in the role of Hitch. Alister Browning brings the appropriate fake cynicism to the role of Alex. New-age Nicola, the play's most endearing character, is played with bounce and charm by Erin Banks, and Danielle Mason's tough yet fragile Blonde seems entirely filmic.
Like the Blonde herself, David Lawrence's production is stylish, controlled and edgy. Film festival-goers (and anyone else) will find a detour to the Fortune rewarding. Friday night's capacity audience certainly did.
Barbara Frame

Theatreview:The New Zealand Performing Arts Review and Directory

Now this is more like it! The saccharine taste of the Fortune's last offering (Waiting for Gateaux) is expunged by the spice of Hitchcock Blonde which set the taste-buds tingling at its NZ premiere on Friday. This is challenging and thrilling theatre and, as Dunedin word-of-mouth is legendary, it will doubtless play to full and enthusiastic houses.

I always have high hopes for any play that opens in London's Royal Court, home of innovative theatre, and is then commercially successful enough to transfer to the West End, and I was not disappointed. Although Terry Johnson's plot is convoluted and sometimes feels contrived, what the heck, like a classic Hitchcock movie it is too engrossing for that to interfere with the headlong excitement of following three fascinating and intertwining narratives, two live from 1999 and 1959, and one on celluloid from 1919.

This erotic-history-mystery genre is not new. In recent years Dunedin has seen Arcadia and Three Days of Rain (WOW and Fortune respectively, yet both directed with ferocious intelligence by Lisa Warrington) but it is still a treat to find theatre as stimulating as Hitchcock Blonde. It provides both the thrill of reading a gripping mystery novel and the insight that comes from watching relationships dissected before your very eyes, a study in dark obsessions ...

The 1999 story involves a middle-aged film lecturer who has discovered mouldering reels of unreleased Hitchcock film from 1919. A lost masterpiece? He manages to persuade his student, an attractive blonde (what else?!), to join him on a Greek island to piece together the fragments while he gradually reveals the nature of his own obsession with more than the master film-maker. Stills from the rediscovered film, featuring a blonde in a bathtub, are projected onto the walls as we play detective to interpret the seemingly sinister events of 1919.

The 1950's story is most gripping, including as it does Hitchcock himself and The Blonde - not the star, but Janet Leigh's body double for the infamous shower scene in Psycho. She too is a blonde (natural "up to a point"), and ambitious to be more than a double - his next leading lady, no less, despite the handicap of a boorish and jealous husband. Given Hitchcock's well-known sadism towards his cool blondes, their tense circling interviews are utterly engrossing.

As Hitchcock used to maintain, 'There is no terror in a bang, only in the anticipation of it", and providing one applies 'bang' to both sex and violence, David Lawrence's production follows this maxim faithfully and to superb effect. Lawrence seems to revel in the complexities of script and staging, subjugating all to the steady build-up of suspense, lightened by humour but climaxing in moments of pure horror. The cast is eagerly grasping the opportunities offered by all the psychological probing, and the acting is uniformly impressive.

As the nameless Blonde of the title, Danielle Mason makes the most of a character who is anything but dumb, as manipulative as she is manipulated. This blonde is extremely articulate, and more exhibitionist than victim. Considering her spellbinding speech about reaching orgasm while displayed naked on the set, she is less triumphantly brazen than might be expected in the nude scene, although her vulnerability has a touching beauty. In crackling dialogue she is easily if improbably a match for the mythic movie director. One of the funniest scenes has her cross-examining the master of suspense on how to dispose of a dead body.

Curious that Mason, who was last seen here in the controversial production of Lulu, is once more a construct of men's desires, beset by grotesques, which is not too harsh a term for the misogynistic Hitch of Patrick Wilson. His interpretation is completely convincing, repellent but hypnotic, making outrageous remarks in a gloriously ghastly Cockney accent. "You will not be required to provide the blood". His dissection of a fish meal while sitting on a studio prop toilet is an image I must strive to forget if I am ever to enjoy sole again ...Unfortunately for me Wilson's was a most memorable performance.

As the menacing husband, Mark Neilson has terrific stage presence, which is certainly needed considering his is almost a silent role. When his brooding finally erupts into violence it is truly shocking. Eat your heart out, Brando, this guy Neilson can really smoulder in a singlet!

Alistair Browning and Erin Banks play the 90's couple with confidence, continuing the exploration of the politics of seduction and sexuality, and conveying the excitement of piecing together the jigsaw from the past. But though interesting, these scenes lack the tension of the 50's narrative, possibly because a young woman of the 90s is less likely to allow herself to become a plaything. Yet Browning makes a credible and sympathetic character of lecturer Alex, aged 46 years and 17 months, pining for the student who reminds him of his first crush, and eventually deciding sadly, "Friendship knocks love into a cocked hat." Too sympathetic, perhaps. I found it hard to credit later his callous betrayal of damaged and self-mutilating Nicola. Banks as Nicola is gutsy and direct, a failed Buddhist apologising to the mosquito she's swiped but taking no crap from Alex until her heart proves to be her undoing.

The Fortune production has indeed been fortunate in securing the Royal Court's original footage of wonderfully evocative fragments from the 1919 film, but has contributed its own impressive effects, including a spooky fantasy shower scene. Peter King has again waved his wand over the stage to create a striking two-storied set, though I did yearn for some blinding Greek colour to off-set the grainy black and white of the 50's world. Maryanne Wright-Smyth's touch was most clearly detectable in the elegant 50's costumes - yes, black, white, and shades of grey.

And once again the programme is worth keeping if only for Reg Graham's lovely photos and dramaturg Alister McDonald's illuminating analysis of Sir Alfred. The Fortune is also to be commended for having the initiative to screen Hitchcock classics in the Hutchinson Studio each Sunday night of the season - a real Hitch-fest!

There you have it. A production not to be missed. Some slightly uncomfortable parallels, of course. How far are we all voyeurs? Isn't that the nature of an audience? Are we in fact responsible for the Blonde's tragic 'lifetime of being looked at instead of loved?'

A second visit might help to make up my mind ...

Critic

Let me start by saying this is a fantastic script. The Fortune has been very hit-and-miss with scripts this year, but The Shape of Things was a hit, and now Hitchcock Blonde follows suit. Thank goodness.
Hitchcock Blonde followed two interlocking stories. One is set in 1999, and follows Alex (Alistair Browning), and aging film lecturer, and his beautiful student Nicola (Erin Banks) who go to a summer house to piece together the remains of an old, unreleased Hitchcock film (surprise, surprise, he seduces her...) The other, set in 1959, shows Hitchcock's (Patrick Wilson) conversations with one of his beautiful blondes.
Browning's performance annoyed me. He played the exact same character as the one he played in Paradise Package earlier this year! Why, Alistair, why? It's not a good character, and I know you can do better!
His crappy character aside, the acting was top-notch. Banks playe the naive, sexy student with ease, which matched Danielle Mason's blonde well. Two sexy blondes who can act, that ain't bad. Wilson's Hitchcock was, well, Hitchcock. You couldn't ask for a more Hitchcockian Hitchcock. There's not really more to say about that, he played Hitchcock like Hitchcock - great. I actually felt a bit bad for Mark Neilson as the husband; he only has a couple of lines, but he gets stabbed and thwacked over and over again.
I usually have a lot of respect for Ulli Briese's lighting, as he's a very talented man. But in this case, the lighting didn't really work. It was too dark. Yes, I know, films of the 30's -50's and all that, but I still need to see their faces properly in this type of play.
It also had one of those annoying stages that have a horizontal split screen, but enough complaining. The show was long, but that doesn't matter when it keeps you interested the whole time.
Andrew Robinson

Sunday Star Times

When you see a blonde in a Hitchcock film, you know she's going to cop it. Even the most statuesque are toppled; smart and everyday-ordinary alike are destined for victimhood, providing eye-candy for voyeristic gourmands who pretend to worship them while devouring them alive.
Pop-culture playwright Terry Johnson - who has based other plays on figures like Freud and Marilyn Munroe - knows this, turns it over and pulls it apart, introducing novel concepts such as intimacy and vulnerability into the sex-war cartoon. He has woven three eras into one plot: the earliest, Hitchcock's film-making beginnings in the silent, black-and-white era; the latest a present-day filmic archaeology of that time; and a posited 1950's meeting of Hitchcock with the blonde he's preparing to be Janet Leigh's double in the Psycho shower scene. It is the last-mentioned that gripped me most - our somewhat weary Hitchcockian expectations were humorously woken up and turned upside down.
Of the two blondes rejecting their actual or impending victimhood, the recent one - though robustly realised by Erin Banks - was less convincing, since she had to defend herself with words.
The 1950's blonde, wittly drawn by Danielle Mason, also had a lot to say. "Are you always this verbose?" grunted Patrick Wilson's Hitchcock, in a fair approximation of the latter's self-caricature as a fastidious bulldog. There was a contrast, however, between her voluble story-telling and the tactiturnity of the males in her life, especially her silent-bully husband (Mark Neilson). The postmodern male in the recent scenario was just too full of bull to persuade anybody he was real, though Alistair Browning did his level best with the role.
Helen Watson White

The Listener

Hitchcock Blonde is probably the most ambitious show in this year's Fortune programme. The extra trouble taken includes the two-tier set: film footage loaned from the original Royal Court Theatre productions in London; and a concurrent short film festival of Alfred Hitchcock classics being shown in the Studio Theatre. All of which make the play seem a bit like a house surrounded in bracing - but happily, it could just as well support itself.
Good bang for the ticket-buyer's buck, it contains two separate stories, loosely connected by the focus on Hitchcock and his obsessions. One plot, unravelling on the upper level of the set, has a middle aged English film professor and his young blonde student restoring recently discovered 1919 Hitchcock footage on a Greek Island in 1999. The professor, though turns out to be more warped than the precious celluloid....
The other plot, set in 1959, centres on Hitchcock and another blonde, the woman who was Janet Leigh's body double in Psycho. We trace the pair as he prepares her for the famous shower scene, and interviews and then screen-tests her - nude - for suitability as his next leading lady. She wants fame not just for its own sake, but also to escape her life with a thuggish hubby.
Then there is what might seem as a third plot: that of the 1919 film which the aceademics n 1999 are trying to restore, and which holds the key to Hitchcock's enduring filmic fixation on - and harsh treatment of - cold, guilty blondes.
Director David Lawrence has assembled and able and confident cast, who glide smoothly between the play's comic and more sinister moments. Patrick Wilson as Hitchcock gives an intriguing performance that hints at psychological frailty whole simultaneosly presenting him as bold, even arrogantly odd. Danielle Mason as the unanamed blonde is a match for him, neatly keeping the wannabe star's desperation just below the surface. The 1999 pair, Erin Banks and Alistair Browing, give heartily to their scenario, but they both tend to slur the acedemic banter about restoration work.
Some aspects for Peter King's otherwise practical set jarred. One wall used for the projection of the 1919 footage had protruding wooden beams that broke the picture, badly and a much heralded real spa-bath installed on the second level was only visable from the very back row of the theatre.
But that's incidental. This production certainly packs the punch the Fortune intends it to. As Hitch says after slurping a baked custard whole like a hog at a trough, "Mmmm delicious"
Anna Chinn

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