I Heart Alice Heart I ~ a theatre review

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I Heart Alice Heart I

Written, directed and performed by Amy Conroy

Co-created by Claire Barrett

Produced by Hotfortheatre (Ireland) for the Auckland Arts Festival

At the Q Theatre Loft

Playing time 1hour 10 mins with no interval

07 March, 2013 to 11 March, 2013 at 8pm (except 10 March, 2013 at 5pm

Reviewed on 07 March, 2013

Published at http://www.theatreview.org.nz

It usually happens in the middle of the rehearsal period for an Ibsen, a Chekhov, a Miller or a Tennessee Williams that someone will ask ‘why are there no plays about happy relationships?’ My answer has been, for three decades now, because happiness doesn’t make good theatre.

I must say it’s great to be proved wrong.

In the case of I Heart Alice Heart I, totally wrong.

I Heart Alice Heart I is exclusively about the happiest of relationships and the audience ate up every word, every nuance and every last piece of cake. Happy relationships always, as you know, have cake.

As the title suggests both characters are named Alice, they are in love with each other and their lives together. They are both sexagenarians – that’s sixty years old or over for those who haven’t made it yet – and it’s an issue. Not a biggie but it is an issue, especially for Alice Kinsella (Amy Conroy) who is the elder Alice by a couple of years. Alice Slattery nee Connolly (Claire Barrett) loves to tease her partner about the age difference and, yes, it’s that type of relationship. It’s gentle, ironic, as jolly as a cosy cardy and a brilliant night out.

The work has, at its centre, a pseudo-documentary format that starts with the two Alices caught stealing in the jams and spreads aisle of the local supermarket. They were seen by a theatre director who, over a protracted period of time, enticed the women into sharing their story with a wider audience.

What they stole was a kiss.

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What follows is a delicious journey through both of their lives, the ups and downs, the tragedies, the heartaches, the joys, the laundry, the holidays, the affair, the heart-stopping illness but above all else the simple love they feel for, and share with, each other.

You really need to experience I Heart Alice Heart I to truly understand the magnitude of Amy Conroy’s extraordinary achievement. She wrote, directed and acts in the production and it’s an enormously subtle and deeply affecting work. The play won  the ‘Fishamble New Writing Award’ for the best new play premiered at the Dublin Fringe Festival in 2010 and Conroy went on to participate in the 2011 Abbey Theatre New Playwright’s Programme. She clearly earned it!

Not that the success of the work is totally down to Conroy. Her partner in crime, co creator and fellow actor Claire Barrett is an absolute delight. She’s funny, engaging, twitchy, quietly impassioned and has the most wonderful way of playing outside the text. I truly believed this was an older gay couple sharing their lives and completely encompassing us with the trivial detritus of their lives. They’re not, of course, they’re a couple of very smart young Irish actors who really know how to do the business.

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The characters have known each other since childhood but their paths split when Alice K went off to London to eventually work at The Times and Alice S who was then Alice C got married to Liam S, the loveliest man I’ve never met. Alice K has adventures with girls especially Louise with whom she has a relationship and Jen with whom she also has a relationship and Jen’s boyfriend who seemed to end up in bed with almost everyone and what ensues is some of the best, and most delicate, comedic playing I’ve experienced in yonks. It is rumoured, mainly by Alice K herself, that she once kissed Dusty Springfield at a party, but Alice S, who wasn’t there, refutes this. Comic opportunities like this are gems and the women make the most of every one of them with nudgy looks, sly exchanges and the crafty connections that underpin all long term relationships.

The story around Liam’s death and the reconnecting of the women is very moving and when Alice S has a friend who asks ‘are you gay now?’ the play moves into much deeper waters and more complex questions begin to be asked.

The work is full of treats – including shared cream sponge – and I’d be remiss if I exposed them all here as my hope is that you’ll take the time to see this Auckland Arts Festival production but I’d also be negligent if I didn’t amplify for you the fact that this isn’t just a funny play about two older ladies who happen to be lesbians and their idiosyncratic life nor is it simply two sublimely talented actors delving deep into their superbly honed craft.

You see, I Heart Alice Heart I is much more than that.

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At its heart the play is political, too. It’s about having a place and standing tall, something the women do via their first gay pride parade where they held hands in public for the first time. It doesn’t sound like much but it’s a powerful political act if your lesbian and you’ve never done it before. It’s about a different form of coming out, a powerful way of saying, as the women do, ‘I don’t want to hide anymore’.

In 1998 I went to my first pride parade here in Auckland. It was called Hero in those days and as I watched the groups of happy people marching I decided I didn’t want to hide anymore either. It was perhaps the most profound moment of my life and these two wonderful actors brought all that flooding back. It’s empowering theatre replete with cake and memories. The full house acknowledged this with an opening night standing ovation and this made me very happy – for them and for me. So much so that I completely forgot where I’d parked my car.

A large group of exquisitely well-behaved and school-uniformed young women attended the performance and the odds are that at least a couple of them would have engaged with the production in a very special way. I hope the subtle, charm-rich messages helped anyone struggling with their sexuality to find the inner strength to be themselves in a world that can still be a bit of a bitch for many LGBTI people.

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