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Saturday 10 March 2012

Top Girls (WYP, 03/03/12)

basics...
Another volunteer placement at the Playhouse, with Andrew joining me in the audience. Top Girls is a feminist play in three acts, with an all-female cast playing various characters. Act 1 sees Marlene, an 80's business-woman, at a dinner party with female historical figures, including Pope Joan. Act 2 begins with a scene involving Marlene's simple niece, and continues at the central character's recruitment agency, where Angie turns up looking for help from her cool aunt. Finally, Act 3 flashes back a year to Marlene's visit with her sister and her first meeting with Angie in years.

brilliant...
The best thing about Top Girls was the opening act. It's odd and there's no explanation for why these 6 women find themselves chatting round the dinner table. Each shares some experiences of being a woman at the time they were alive, and the overlapping dialogue makes what is a fairly static scene come alive. There's humour too, mainly in the portrayal of Dull Gret, a simple woman from the Dark Ages who steals the cutlery and bread. Pope Joan's a hoot too, and her story is interesting, as is that of Lady Nijo, a geisha who seems to compete for how hard her life was with rather boring Izabella Bird. The cast and the staging were superb.

but...
If the whole play had carried on like the first Act, even with little plot development, then I would have been happy. Unfortunately when the story became less quirky and moved away from fantasy dinners my interest flagged. I really didn't understand what the whole thing was supposed to be saying. The random sequencing of the acts and the dull story of Marlene and her simple niece were obtuse to the point of boring. I'm sure there are better ways to explore the suffering of women than in this round-the-houses, need-to-study-the-text-in-depth-to-understand-it sort of play. 

briefly...
Aside from an inventive and memorable first act, Top Girls was too obscure in its feminist energies to work as a good piece of theatre.

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