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In
David Lynch's film Wild at Heart, women are demons or victims; they seem
to have been constructed to fulfil certain archetypal male fantasies.
The patterns defining the wicked witch/domineering mother and the victimised
heroine/sexual temptress are specifically represented in the actions and
physicality of the characters Lula and Marietta. Similarly, the men also
might be perceived as archetypes; the Lover/Good Guy, the Libidinous Bad
Guy/Evil Controller and the Innocent, all belong to the 1950's melodrama. Lynch, of course, was parodying but also exploiting a kind of melodrama, and cannot be accused of being unaware of the genre he is part guying. A straight melodrama would have been easier to rework, but then that would have been an easier target. Wild at Heart provided a complex base to work from.
In response, the company presented a series of permutations of relations between mother and daughter, played in different ways by different actresses (Witch, Madonna, Temptress etc), and drawing the audience into analysis of the varied possibilities.
The production raised the question of the difference between film and theatre. If film incorporates the viewer in the space but excludes him/her from the action, theatre incorporates the viewer more fully in the space and though not of course completely, in the action, because the challenge is physical, immediate and direct, especially if individual eye contact is made. In a close semi-circle, the problem for the actor is to maintain concentration in such circumstances. Different parts of the enclosing half circle were involved or excluded as the action shifted its focus and direction. The effect was disturbing and involving for audience as well as actors.
© Wired Theatre 2006 |
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