Categories: Reviews

The Year of Magical Thinking

An insight into someone’s personal journey with grief is exactly that; personal, and those who have travelled a similar path would empathise with Joan Didion’s experience. But her memoir The Year of Magical Thinking failed to reach across all her audience. The one-woman show performed by Robyn Nevin, told a touching story but it lacked depth and failed to draw sincere compassion.

Cremorne Theatre, QPAC, Brisbane
Queensland Theatre Company & Sydney Theatre Company
Friday, 18 September, 2009

An insight into someone’s personal journey with grief is exactly that; personal, and those who have travelled a similar path would empathise with Joan Didion’s experience. But her memoir The Year of Magical Thinking failed to reach across all her audience. The one-woman show performed by Robyn Nevin, told a touching story but it lacked depth and failed to draw sincere compassion.
 
Joan Didion wrote this screenplay after the death of both her husband and adult daughter within 18-months. She tries to deal with her loss with “magical thinking”. Like a primitive culture that believes if a virgin is sacrificed the rain will return, she believes if she doesn’t throw out her husband’s shoes he might come back. Didion guides the audience through her doubt and her hidden struggle with grief. On the other hand outsiders like her hospital social worker, who delivers the news of her husband’s death, believe her to be “one cool customer”. The strange idiosyncrasies Didion develops during her grief enlighten the audience as to her thinking and behaviour, but was a very two-dimensional view of her emotional journey to accept the loss of her loved ones.
 
Robyn Nevin’s devoted narrative held my attention, and while the story of Didion’s battle was interesting and revealing, I wanted to be drawn further into the story. No genuine emotional connection was built with the character which kept the audience at a distance. The constant references to expensive brand names like Tiffany and Prada, and other snobbish allusions built a pretentious barrier that was hard to break.
 
With a simple set design of rows of chairs, and not much movement from Nevin on stage, director Cate Blanchett’s creation was stripped to the bare essentials of good story-telling. This fit the stark reality of Didion’s story and allowed Nevin’s narration to shine. The bold lighting by Nick Schlieper at times provided instant refreshment from the sometimes drawn out segments of the show. Natasha Anderson used imaginative computer-generated sound to complement the sharp lighting and heighten the drama. The overall vision created a strong platform for the unravelling of events.
 
While Blanchett and Nevin devoted the production as much passion and feeling as possible, the flaws in the show lay in the story itself. At 90 minutes with no interval, some details were repetitive, but mainly the audience needed to be able to connect with her grief.

Bookings on 1800 355 528

Until the 17 October, 2009

 

Anne-Marie Peard

Anne-Marie spent many years working with amazing artists at arts festivals all over Australia. She's been a freelance arts writer for the last 10 years and teaches journalism at Monash University.

Share
Published by
Anne-Marie Peard

Recent Posts

Interview with Gary Abrahams

Fresh from presenting Yentl in London and now celebrating the success of Eurydice at forty…

11 hours ago

The Tony Awards Are Not About Numbers, They Are About The Story Broadway Wants To Tell

The Tony Awards are never just about who gave the best performance or which production…

17 hours ago

30 years in the making, Opera Australia’s milestone tour of a Mozart masterpiece: Don Giovanni

Marking three decades of Opera Australia’s national touring program, the 2026 tour of Michael Gow’s…

19 hours ago

Paul Capsis and Adam Noviello unite for Grey Gardens-inspired HOUSE OF ROT

Australian stage luminaries Paul Capsis (The Who’s Tommy) and Adam Noviello (Hedwig and the Angry…

2 days ago

Les Femmes at The Grand Electric

What happens when some of the greatest songs ever made famous by male artists are…

2 days ago

First Look – Sierra Boggess in Concert at Theatre Royal Drury Lane

Producers Darren Bell and Cuffe & Taylor for Live Nation are proud to announce that…

2 days ago