Two actors – presumably in their 60s – dressed in dark attire, sitting on fixed chairs about five metres apart, one questioning the other and then the roles are reversed … for 100 minutes without interval. No set. The audience on tiered seating on either side. Hardly what you may imagine could lead to riveting and dramatic theatre, but the power is in the brilliant writing and acting, which had me hanging on every word.
L’amante anglaise was published in 1967 as a novella consisting of three interviews, but playwright Marguerite Duras (1914-1996) soon created this theatre adaptation, which was first presented in 1968. According to director Laurence Strangio, the grisly material – based on real events that took place in 1949 – was originally explored in a more naturalistic play, The viaducts of Seine-et-Oise (1958). Duras was apparently dissatisfied with the conventional form of the earlier work and hence created her own. L’amante anglaise is a poignant and emotionally powerful portrait of lost passion and a life lived inside one’s own head.
Pierre Lannes (Robert Meldrum) is controlled, detached and unemotional when questioned about whether or not he aided his wife, Claire (Jillian Murray), in perpetrating the heinous crime. He acknowledges that he once longed for her, but that was many years ago, that they led ostensibly separate lives and that he had taken a number of lovers. She – accepting but hardly apologetic – had been in love with a policeman before she met him and now cared for a labourer. She spent most of her time absorbed in her own thoughts in the garden of their home.
For her part Marie-Therese Bousquet, the deaf and mute cousin whom we never meet, cooked and kept house for the Lannes. All we learn from Claire is that Marie-Therese was overweight and she couldn’t stomach Marie-Therese’s stew, which was a favourite of her husband. The play is broadly split into two halves after an initial matter of fact description of the crime and the confession.
However, if you want insight into the human condition, a look into how the inexpressible can still find voice, then look no further than L’amante anglais. Jillian Murray, the 2015 Green Room Award recipient for Best Female Performer in Independent Theatre for this role, and Robert Meldrum are equally superb in this compelling two-hander. Having played two sold out seasons at La Mama, it is now at fortyfive downstairs, 45 Flinders Lane, until 3rd July, presented in association with La Mama.
Alex First
David Edwards is the editor of The Blurb and a contributor on film and television