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Review: Three Sisters - it's a Russian revolution as Chekhov is modernised

September 27, 2012 10:23
Three Sisters, complete with grunge rock

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

2 min read

Anton Chekhov’s masterpiece has been reworked before, and with rewarding results. In 2008, a version by Diane Samuels and Tracy-Ann Oberman set the play in post-war Jewish Liverpool. Instead of yearning to see Moscow, the siblings were in a New York state of mind. And instead of Olga, Masha and Irina, we had Gertie, May and Rita.

But here, Australian writer-director Benedict Andrews updates the play even further, to the 21st century. And although the production never adequately deals with the “why” — why in this day and age three well-educated women would be unable to strike out from their stultifying provincial town and see the Moscow of their dreams — this production still dares to shatter the reverential conventions that usually come with Chekhov.

Johannes Schütz’s sparse design places all the action on a grey platform, above which hangs a grey block that serves as a pall of wintry, Russian sky. Chekhov’s dialogue is littered with four-letter swearing and the show paints the sisters — especially the self-mourning Masha — as the kind of girls who would go clubbing if they did not have such contempt for the town in which they live. William Houston’s visiting Colonel Vershinin commands what appears to be a modern Russian army that fights post-Soviet wars in places like Georgia or Chechnya.

For many, none of this will come as a recommendation. Only the other day, a fellow arts journalist alarmingly stabbed his roast chicken lunch while complaining about theatre’s constant reaching out for modern relevance. On that occasion, it was the idea of a King Lear who had sexually abused his daughters that particularly got my companion’s goat. But there is nothing more thrilling in the theatre than having expectations exploded.