Philip Glass and Phelim
McDermott
Heath Ledger Theatre
Feb 19 – 23, 2020
It
doesn’t take long for any trepidation the juxtaposition of the word Tao and the
name (Philip) Glass might cause to dissipate.
It
happens as soon as a late-coming, dishevelled, lost-looking, middle-aged bloke
gives up looking for his seat in the Heath Ledger Theatre, shambles onto the
stage and starts chatting to us.
He’s
Phelim McDermott, and he’s one of those slightly cockeyed, askew English coves
we’ve come to be very comfortable with – a Bill Oddie meets Alan Davies meets
one of the scruffier Doctor Whos.
Nothing
he says or does over the next couple of hours takes us out of the comfort zone
he creates, and that allows him and his fellow performers –the puppeteers David
Emmings, Janet Eluk and Rachel Leonard, the clarinettist Jack McNeill, the
violinist Rahkhi Singh, the pianist Katherine Tinker and the percussionist
Chris Vatalaro, as well as Philip Glass himself, constantly heard and felt,
even though he’s not there in person – to go to some exotic interior places and
have some singular theatrical adventures.
It’s
all because McDermott is an engaging, energetic and convincing storyteller, and
that, despite its arcanities and exotica, Tao
of Glass possesses a perfectly straightforward narrative.
You
never lose your way in it; and when you’re not lost, it’s amazing what you can
find.
McDermott
tells the story of the winding path that led him and Glass to the work we see
on stage. It starts with the young Phelim at the Royal Exchange Theatre in his
hometown, Manchester, the wonder of seeing Laurence Olivier and the other
greats of the British stage firing his ambition to make theatre himself.
(He
has done, through a distinguished career in theatre and opera – including three
of Glass’s own, Satyagraha, The Perfect American and Akhanaten).
Their
collaboration on Tao of Glass is
structured around thirteen Glass pieces, most written for the play, augmented
by a couple of signature pieces from his seminal 1982 chamber music work, Glassworks. McDermott has created
tableaux for each, some narrative, some philosophical, some purely sensory.
Through
them we learn of their attempt to recruit the celebrated children’s author
Maurice Sendak in a staging of his The
Night Kitchen. Sendak is gruffly enthusiastic, “We gotta do this fucking
thing; we gotta do this thing before I croak!” But he does, before it can be
got up – though not before giving Tao of
Glass the inspiration for one rhapsodic highlight of the show, with pieces
of an old piano, McDermott’s young son Ridley, shadow puppets and streams of
manuscript (words? music?) hurtling above the revolving stage to Glass’s
much-loved Opening.
There
are many others as McDermott and Glass explore diverse philosophical texts (Lao
Tsu’s I Ching, the Sanskrit Rigvida) and theories of consciousness (deep
democracy), or, from a piling cumulonimbus cloud of paper, a blizzard of music,
words and forms, ostensibly just for the sheer beauty of the thing but, lying
beneath, a very subtle message that you can get swept up – in the senses, by
information, by life – but you can get tied up in knots too.
All
these strands coalesce in an audacious catharsis; a long, long scene (I’m
guessing ten minutes maybe not quite that long) where McDermott imagines
himself in a coma and Glass tries to reach him with music.
There’s
hardly a rule of theatre it doesn’t break, but such is the clarity and skill of
both thought and method in its staging (Kirsty Housley’s direction is always
sure and often inspired), it rolls smoothly over those conventions and our
doubts.
And
that is true of this whole, intriguing and beguiling work.
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