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Theatre Review by Christina Manolescu</MARQUEE>


Sofia, with the gravel-aged voice and the rocking chair, hails from some trouble-spot in Old Europe — She has seen life, O has she seen life! Sofia’s daughter, Lara, strives vainly to match her musical artistry, not to mention her expectations. Maya, their beloved daughter-granddaughter, the prodigy they are both awaiting — languishes agonizingly upon some metaphysical timeline as the embodiment of their joint will and desire, ambiguously alive, yet forever and ever unborn.

Novelist-playwright Huston performs an unexpected and delicate balancing act as she swivels between past, present and the ‘unborn’ future, coloured by hope and dread, in which Destiny itself is held hostage to that tenuous link in their feminine blood-line.

History meanwhile folds back onto itself — eerily and literally — for both Lara and Sofia. In one broad sweep, all husbands, fathers, in fact, the entire male gender is dispensed with, relegated to mere disembodied voices on the periphery of their enchanted feminine circle. Being men, it would seem they are reduced to no more than impartial or else judgmental observers of the REAL drama being enacted on stage: a once-indivisible female tripartite ironically divided by family bonds and bondage and a conflicted passion for art.

Lyne Paquette's stage setting is sober and non-distracting, a mingling of dark and light and elemental red, the shade-colours of life itself. A ‘super-size’ piano dominates this intimate theatre space, appropriately symbolic of the drama that unfolds.

Lara, the apparent lynchpin of the three, upon whom the uneven burden of events must fall, expresses each demi-note on the spectrum of emotion from prosaic to sublime, from blissful to enraged, from resentful to vacant, from impassioned to inert. Stechysin’s is a trained and subtle voice, delicate, precise, an emotional voice of breath and colour, pitch and tone that truly captures the imagistic rhythm of Huston’s poetics, newly adapted to the stage. Physically, too, Stechysin has the ease, grace and adroitness of a gymnast. It is she who continually — and in the end tragically — treads those accursèd high-tension lines between Sofia who declines and withers, whilst super-gifted Maya flowers into life.

Theatre Review by Christina Manolescu
Invisible Cities Network


March 29 - April 9. 2006

PERSEPHONE PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS

The English World Premiere of Nancy Huston's Prodigy

Adapted for the stage by Gabriel Garran, Directed by Gabrielle Soskin

Wednesday, March 29 to Saturday, April 8, 2006 at 8:00 p.m.
Matinees: Sunday April 2 and Sunday April 9, 2006 at 2 p.m.

Théâtre Ste-Catherine
264 Ste-Catherine East, Montréal Qc
metro St.Laurent or Berri-UQUAM

Tickets: 514.481.1327

Adults $21
Students $16
Groups $15