When a relationship is stripped of its giddy, golden
beginnings, when two people are left with little hope, left to fend for
themselves in a life working against them, do they grow stronger or does it
tear them apart? ‘Every Second’ is brutal and funny and raw. It is confronting
and honest and despite the many opportunities, movement director Samantha
Chester ensures that it never becomes crass or uncomfortable. It follows the
story of two couples, Jen/Bill and Meg/Tim, struggling with infertility, desperately
trying to have children. It examines the pressures of relationships, tested by
stress and exhaustion and explores what is left when love is gone.
Director Shannon Murphy emphasises the parallels Bates draws
between beautiful, manmade lakes and the process of procreation. The wonderful
spiraling set (designed by Andy McDonnell) is at the heart of the action, the
characters winding down the tracks up and down, as their relationship shift and
their hopes of having children decline/improve.
The tone of the play fluctuates between lighthearted comedy
and moments of utter disappointment. Glenn Hazeldine as Bill shows us the funny
side of infertility. He is always sincere but his poor judgment of
appropriateness makes for a good laugh. Hazeldine is partnered well with
Georgina Symes as Jen, who stands her ground as a strong but sensitive woman.
Meg (Julia Ohanessian) and Tim (Simon Corfield) are the
younger couple of the two. Their lives are dictated by a strict schedule and
defined by new age and eastern medicinal practise. The absurdity of the issue
comes to light in some of the funniest scenes in the play – going by the
schedule even if that means doing it in public, giving sperm the best chance by
using fresh egg white lubricant (which Meg always carries with her) and Tim’s
constant inability to finish because of a reminder that his “mother called
earlier”.
The pair play well together, but individually they are just
as talented. Ohanessian’s performance as Meg is breathtaking. She is able to
play upon the eastern suburbs herbal tea enthusiast stereotype that Bates has
satirized in her writing and then at other times she makes us cry – moving us
with beautifully delivered monologues.
The writing keeps us in balance – it allows us time to
sympathise with the characters and gives us room to giggle at their misfortunes
too, otherwise we are left with a fairly depressing storyline. Bates brings it
all to a climax in a hilarious scene of synchronized sperm swimming, a
reference to Bates’ line about procreation being “like a ballet”. The scene comprises of all four actors dressed
in crisp white suits, limbering up and preparing for the race – only to turn on
each other in viscous slow motion combat, leaving one lone victor.
These moments were good fun, but of course were countered by
the unforeseeable dramas that life is dotted with. Infertility meets infidelity
but then things start to look up before we realise they’re only good for so
long. The play ends where it began, in the park, staring at the “beautiful”,
“manmade” lake – atop the spiral set, perhaps symbolic of the womb that has
brought joy for one couple and heartbreak for another. It seems unsatisfying,
confusing and frustrating that it should end with such a blasé tone. But that’s
life, sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t, and then sometimes it just
keeps going.
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