Before Your Very Eyes

Before Your Very Eyes
COMPO / Gob Squad. Melbourne Festival. Concept, Design and Direction: Gob Squad (Johanna Freiburg, Sean Patten, Berit Stumpf, Sarah Thom, Bastain Trost, and Simon Will). The Malthouse, Merlyn Theatre. October 24 – 27, 2012.

Before Your Very Eyesrewards with the sheer entertainment of watching beautiful young, energetic, professional actors at work, to say nothing of the interesting perspective it throws onto the art of living, by looking at it through young eyes.  

On a set that has been likened to a fish bowl, after a lively warm up and introduction, under the guidance of a neutral style female voice-over, seven young feisty charismatic actors dress up and ‘act’ growing up.  They seem to work as if in a game without guile or pretense and each child has a very strong ‘stage presence’.

Masterfully, three or so years ago when this part of a three-tiered project commenced, the creators had set aside considerable recorded footage of the youthful participants so as to be able to incorporate it in future performances.  The payoff, of this, is now. The younger children interview their older selves.  There is often something profound about the probing questions of a child to an adult.  In their concern for a child’s piece of mind an adult will perhaps censor or moderate their responses.  There is something almost mind boggling about the questing of the child actors to their older selves who are guised in the characters of their ‘interpreted’ mature adult selves.   

Very strikingly we are watching lively energetic performers who do not seem to have inflated egos and are not posturing.  What could have been a voyeuristic experience is not, particularly, because of the forthright commitment of the performers and their representation of themselves and thankfully they are not in the least sexualized.

This is one of three shows that I choose from a restricted list this year although I did see others.  All three After Life, We’re Gonna Die and this Before Your Very Eyes are really about what we value in life.  They all discuss death or and dying in an open way leaving space for ones own take, interpretation and thought processes.

Demanding but satisfying theatre.

Suzanne Sandow

Subscribe to our E-Newsletter, buy our latest print edition or find a Performing Arts book at Book Nook.