City Guide to Edinburgh, Scotland

City Guide to Edinburgh, Scotland

Fall


By Bill Dunlop - Posted on 04 August 2008

Fall
4
Show details
Venue: 
Traverse Theatre
Company: 
Traverse Theatre Company in association with the Royal Shakespeare Company
Running time: 
150mins
Production: 
Zinnie Harris (playwright), Dominic Hill (director), Tom Piper (designer), Dan Jones (sound designer), Chahine Yavroyan (lighting designer)
Performers: 
Geraldine Alexander (Kate), Cliff Burnett (Evener), Darrell D'Silva (Pierre), Brian Ferguson (Guard), Meg Fraser (Kiki), Paul Hickey (Howard), Kevin McMonagale (Liddel), Samantha Young (Justine)

George Steiner has been often quoted that it's impossible to write tragedy after Auschwitz; perhaps it's even harder after Srebrenicze, which doesn't stop attempts being made. Zinnie Harris' Fall is set in a country of the playwright's imagination, where perpetrators of not-particularly described mayhem are about to be executed. The government is barely holding on to an economy edging toward free-fall and a population in search of scape-goats. Familiar territory from TV and newspaper reports, broad-brushed into place without identifying places or people whose names might sound too close to familiar "typographical errors."

The central character, Kate (Geraldine Alexander), searches for truth amid confusion and compromise. Evener (Cliff Burnett), facing execution, refuses to offer any of the securities she seeks, while Pierre (Darrell D'Silva), the Prime Minister, tries desperately to cling to the power he knows has slipped to his Deputy, Howard (Paul Hickey), and Kiki, his wife (Meg Fraser). Kate becomes a pawn in the manoeuvres to carry out mass execution whilst retaining enough respectability to allow foreign investment to prop up the tottering regime.

Although the characters represent different strands and values, they retain the integrity of their characterisation, which at some moments is perversely a pity. Because what's gained in identification is lost in argument. If it's become impossible to write tragedy after Auschwitz, has it also become impossible to write politically after Iraq and Afghanistan? It does feel rather as if setting Fall in A.N. Other country of the recent past (or future?), whilst allowing people to do things a little differently, doesn't allow the audience to have to relate action and characters to anything very specific.

We can walk out of the theatre and talk about the play without the distressing difficulty of naming names that might upset us. Undeniably great plays work beyond and outwith the context in which they may be placed - Macbeth and Ibsen's An Enemy of The People immediately spring to mind - but context is assuredly there, a hand and handle we can immediately grasp as we face up to uncomfortable truths. While Harris deploys her arguments skilfully, their deliberate de-contextualisation allows us too much room to avoid them.

Dates: August 3-16

Times: varies, see Fringe Programme for details.

Copyright Bill Dunlop August 2008

Published on edinburghguide.com August 2008