Pelican Volume 92 Edition 6 - /

Page 68

The production itself can be seen as: “A twisting journey of unpacking the canon, finding moments that we felt needed addressing and responding to them. We began in 2019 making work of all different styles and approaches from dance to modernised retellings. We reworked scenes and adjusted the narrative to give more power and autonomy to the female characters. And we also amalgamated multiple plays into a single moment.” - Unbound. The three leading sisters - Emilia (from Othello), Ophelia (from Hamlet) and Volumnia (from Coriolanus) - took centre stage in a way unprecedented in any of Shakespeare’s works. Unbound explores their resilience, direction and relationships in the fight to stay fit in a world defined by power and its dynamics. Across two acts (Act I: The Kingdom, and Act II: The Forest), the production explored “narrative-based moments, and [other moments] bent towards the abstract and joyful. Two very different forms that spoke powerfully in juxtaposition to each other. And in this moment Unbound became a conversation between these two forms. If we want to empower women in Shakespeare’s canon, if we want to unpack and respond to the restrictions placed on gender and sexuality, neither of these forms can be silenced. Both need to be explored.” 68

The first act led us from coffins to thrones to high walls by open water - the set consisted of heavy cubes that were constantly changing and evolving to depict the scene with powerful simplicity that encouraged the audience to focus on the power of the dialogue, movement, and dynamic relationships between characters. Wholly full circle, the opening act both began and ended with the death of a queen – a powerful parallel that pushes the mind to try and battle those Shakespearean concepts of fate and free will in the lives of women characters in these classic plays, and in the society they represent. Their plot – utterly powerful – touched on many key themes in feminist analysis, as seen through the exploration of gaslighting, madness, hysteria, emotional evaluations of women as leaders, power structures in romantic relationships, the concept of sisterhood, and the demonstration of various female figures in and out of power throughout the course of the play. The intensity of the emotions conveyed at times felt too intimate to watch – not just love and lust, but rage, grief, betrayal, loss, hurt, fear, empowerment, strength, and influence. The colouring of the costuming and set was also noteworthy. Black and white costumes and set pieces were disrupted - and jarringly

Pelican: The Movie broke box office


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

The Return of John F. Kennedy, President/ Astronaut/American – Giles Chan

4min
pages 68-69

Anonymous

5min
pages 72-74

Earth Cry – Owen Gust

1min
pages 70-71

Rachel Denham-White

6min
pages 62-65

Shervington

2min
pages 56-57

MacDonald

2min
pages 60-61

Report: Violence in Media Most Common in Rug Commercials – Charlie Mills

3min
pages 66-67

Not Breathing – Manveen Kaur Kohli

1min
page 58

Clea Sanders Unbound: A Review – Izabela Barakovska

7min
pages 52-55

Emma Horak Berenice’s Lover – Rachel Denham-White

1min
page 59

Kyaw Win

1min
pages 45-48

MET/GALA – Ruby Marguerite

19min
pages 30-43

Cloud Wars – Julian Coleman

4min
pages 26-27

Reserve – Ashley Browse

1min
page 44

Jack Meakins & Saul Revell

7min
pages 8-13

@#%\!: Who Your Favourite Punctuation Will Vote For – Luke Barber

3min
pages 18-19

Phoebe Levin

9min
pages 20-25

Clea Sanders

3min
pages 6-7
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.