Photo: Ruphin Coudyzer

Athol Fugard’s latest play, The Train Driver, which had its world première here, is his most intriguing since the advent of democracy. It is not as resolved a work as Exits and Entrances; it suffers the same monologue-heavy, undramatic radio play quality of Booitjie and the Oubaas, but it is braver, less contrived, far more on target than either Victory or Coming Home. It is also ingenious.

Roelf Visagie (Sean Taylor) is a train driver with post-traumatic stress disorder after a black woman with her baby strapped to her back committed suicide by placing herself under his engine. The true story on which this is based is even more horrific. The suicide (Pumla Lolwana) took two more children with her, one of whom she pulled back on to the tracks when the child tried to escape. Perhaps this created too many moral ambiguities for Fugard, but Roelf (and Fugard) is strangely neglectful on the dimension the death of the infant should bring; his beef is with the mother. Tracking down her body to confront her ghost leads Roelf to a Godforsaken graveyard outside Motherwell, where Simon Hanabe (Owen Sejake) buries the unclaimed corpses of the nameless. Packs of feral dogs and equally ferocious gangs of dehumanised young men prowl the area.

The characterisation of Simon is rudimentary and uncomfortable; he is the familiar, epigrammatic rustic with a common sense that is at once comical and full of wisdom. His dynamic with Roelf often feels antediluvian, but Sejake has a gigantic stage presence and is utterly compelling.

For his part, Taylor is hammy, and when Roelf mentally breaks down early on, Taylor elicits laughs. Very oddly, Roelf keeps bursting into Afrikaans and then translating in English; it rings false, destroying our suspension of disbelief. Taylor these days seems to have a hard enough time just doing a South African accent. The play would be stronger in Afrikaans, with Roelf speaking in his mother tongue.

But the ingenuity of The Train Driver lies in that collision between the unstoppable subject and its immovable object. What Fugard has uniquely articulated for us at last, like no other playwright, is the dilemma of white guilt and its existential anguish; the counterintuitive truth that we are responsible for the destruction we cause but over which we have no control.

whos afraid

Like Strindberg’s Dance of Death, Edward Albee’s masterful Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? delves into embittered marital gamesmanship. In both plays, an older couple feed each other’s mutual pathologies and devour their visitors. Get the host turns into get the guest.
Audiences will be familiar with Mike Nichols’s abiding film version, though it lingered on the sexual dalliances and many of the George’s musings on eugenics were cut from the screenplay.

Martha, Albee tells us, is 52, a ‘boisterous woman’, ‘ample, but not fleshy’. She’s married younger – 46-year-old George in the history department, ‘thin, hair growing grey’. Her father is president of the university. “There are easier things,” sighs George.

After a faculty party, a newly-wed and newly arrived-in-town couple, the hapless ingénue Honey married (we discover for her daddy’s money) to the strapping, “good-looking” Nick – he’s in the biology department you see – join George and Martha at home for more booze.

During the course of a drunken evening, overbearing Martha and withered George ridicule and demean one another. Albee’s pithy script is full of one-line stingers and ripostes that draw blood. As George puts it, “it isn’t the prettiest spectacle…seeing a couple of middle-age types hacking away at each other”.

But Nick quickly learns to play. He accepts Martha’s blatant swooning, but soon finds in the second act – entitled Walpurgisnacht – he has miscalculated. He and Honey are the clumsy witnesses to a metaphorical murder, in danger of treading the same path. Martha and George at some point did love each other. To sustain their relationship they imagined a child, a kind of allegory for what was good between them – “the one thing I’ve tried to carry pure and unscathed through the sewer of this marriage” cries Martha. But when Martha oversteps the line with yet another sexual humiliation, George decides to kill their son.

Little has dated or dented the script, though Albee has returned to this theme in his most recent and equally masterful play, The Goat – or Who is Sylvia? There is a certain point of betrayal where something breaks and nothing will ever be the same, despite regrets, despite remorse.

A testament to the script is that when first performed in 1963 Arthur Hill won the Tony Award for best actor in the part of George, and the recent revival of the play on Broadway earned Bill Irwin the same accolade. Having seen this recent revival of Who’s Afraid on Broadway, with Kathleen Turner and Irwin, I had hoped that our own accomplished team of Fiona Ramsay (Martha) and Sean Taylor (George) slogging at each other under the veteran directorship of Janice Honeyman, promised to compare favourably. There is no reason why not.

However, shortly after curtain up, I began to feel I was about to be force-fed parochial pie for the next three hours. But it’s a superbly constructed play and worth hearing for that alone.

Albee’s characters are emotionally complex and the acerbic dialogue, for all its boldness, is subtle. The problem is that there is little grasp of the type of people, the East board American intellectual, academic and socialite classes, Albee is portraying. The production team don’t understand the characters. The script is bullied for laughs; the performance without nuance.

The opening exchanges between George and Martha were disappointing. The accents are too brassy. Martha is boisterous, but not as excessively vulgar, heavily made-up and slatternly as Janice Honeyman seems to have directed. The first impression is that we’re in for a night of watching the Cheap-Laughs at home or some sitcom version of Albee’s play. In one directorial liberty, kinky red lingerie is discovered behind a couch pillow. She jumps on chairs in her high heels, glass in hand, ranting. Later on, she’s about to give George a blowjob on stage.
Sean Taylor’s George lacks playfulness and irony. He is sour when he should be dry; raging instead of cunning. When Martha says he makes her puke, George’s reply – that it’s not a very nice thing to say – is delivered as if he’s freshly wounded. Nor can you imagine him having any kind of intellectual life. The script is clear about his bookishness, which makes Martha’s henpecking and George’s academic failure all the more poignant. After all, they debate the subtle difference between abstract, abstruse and recondite. Instead, we get a stack of National Geographic magazines sitting on a coffee table.

The younger couple fare worse. Erica Wessels’s Honey is no more than a caricature from someone else’s farce. The character is already so written up by Albee that to come across plausibly a restrained approach is needed. Nicholas Pauling’s Nick is too slight, without the crucial swagger we need from him. Pauling is cocky enough, but frequently looks terrified. Nick is often unsure, never chicken. We hardly feel he poses an adulterous threat to George. It’s all rather forced, and there is little understanding of the supporting dynamic the script requires.

However – and this is not the reviewer trying to sugar coat a bitter pill – the production manages to arrive in the third act. It really is worth the wait. Albee’s powerful dramatic engine kicks in in the third act entitled The Exorcism. Taylor uses an effective rictus-faced laugh and perfectly honed timing gained from a life on the stage.

Ramsay is a redoubtable and skilful actress; despite her part being demeaned by some unfortunate choices in the interpretation, she manages to create deep sympathy for her characterisation. In the final laconic exchange with Martha, George asks: “Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf?” “I am, George, I am.”

The conclusion is as powerful and as touching as any headlining production I have seen.

Exits and Entrances

I commented in a recent review of the Baxter’s production of Fugard’s Exits and Entrances about the changing style of acting – a pivotal theme to Fugard’s play – about how theatre styles outdate. We’ve moved away from “theatricality” in the sense of foregrounded technique – the magnified gestures, the trick of the voice – the kind of extravagant acting that earned Laurence Olivier’s Othello the nickname Hello Golly!
And that was my problem with Sean Taylor – brilliant in the part of Huguenet performing on and off stage as Huguenet – but not making the transition when he is required to be the man Huguenet contemplating suicide on the Baxter stage as a character in a 21st century Fugard play. Taylor is a 1980s actor. There is still much nostalgia for this style of acting in Cape Town – it fits with a large part of the audience’s preconception or idea of what good acting is. The shadow of the old style also stalks Goodman – though he is more convincing, whereas Taylor is compelling, but not believable. However, he may work better now that Exits and Entrances has moved to the Concert Hall, though I believe the Studio was the right space for this piece.

The shift is partly the influence of film and television, but it has also been the nature of the material, the characters and the style of writing, in the same way that politicians now no longer give great rhetorical speeches (the last was probably Kennedy), except perhaps Castro!

There is one twist in this tale of styles – and that is Steven Berkoff. His one man performances are all about foregrounded technique and exaggerated gesture. But it works brilliantly, because he creates his own alphabet and teaches it to the audience during the course of his performance. It is an integral and wholly consistent part of the experience.