The Revlon Girl
The Revlon Girl – Crescent Theatre, 25th October
Theatre based on tragic events can risk monopolising the
action with unstructured grief. A play based on the real-life tragedy of a colliery
spill that destroyed a local school, killing 116 children, certainly risks
this. But the Crescent have created a production that is not only heart-wrenchingly
sad, but funny, thought-provoking and surprising.
Set in 1960s Aberfan, Wales, Neil Anthony Docking’s play
opens with sound effects that depict the devastating events. The sound of
children playing is followed by a school-bell, and after that – the
all-encompassing reverberation of a landslide. While this captured in a few
seconds the cause for grief, it was far better delivered by the four leading
ladies that carried this play: the mothers of children who died.
These ladies have set up a meeting place to protest, talk
and generally try to make sense of their altered lives. For one of their
sessions, they decide to invite a “Revlon Girl” from Bristol, in the hopes that
her mobile makeup trolley might help them to feel a bit more human. What
follows is an hour of outbursts, debates and monologues about what it means to
go on existing after such a disaster.
It’s clear from the start that the Revlon Girl (portrayed by
Femke Whitney) doesn’t want to be there. The ever-leaking roof of the room
where the tutorial is held announces its shabbiness, and forced friendliness
descends into plain awkwardness as she fails to hide her guilt. Whitney’s
portrayal is disjointed, but effectively so, as she moves between stages of
attempting to understand the other women’s’ grief.
With ladies slowly filtering into the make-up session, the
play has that Chekhovian feel of a liminal space: one where characters are
constantly failing to arrive, or attempting to leave. The four people who do
turn up are an eclectic mix of emotions: Rona is furious, Marilyn can’t
stop crying, Sian is hysterically happy, and Jean is running around tyring to
make everybody tea. In their stilted conversations and arguments they feel
refreshingly human.
The group’s exchanges with the Revlon Girl form much of the drama,
marking her as a clear outsider. Even her costuming highlights her difference:
she wears a striking tartan suit that clashes with the red-brown colour scheme
of the group. In particular, the commercial nature of her job simply doesn’t
fly with these ladies. Tag-lines like ‘bring new life to your skin’ take on a
new resonance when spoken to a group of grieving mothers, and this irony is
handled well.
Rona, expertly carried by Katie Merriman, uses cutting dark
comedy to shock the audience out of any false sense of tranquillity. The
production is unafraid to shy away from the facts, with chilling details such
as the ‘warnings’ that the local authorities had received about the danger of
the tip, and the measly compensation given to bereaved families. As the REP
prepares to put on ‘Value Engineering’ – a verbatim reconstruction of the
Grenfell Tower Public Inquiry – these questions couldn’t be more pressing.
Makeup is a paradoxical concept in the play: it stimulates
the women by getting them to discuss shades and routines, but disgusts them at
other times. When the ever-grumpy Marilyn attempts to wipe off her under-eye
concealer, she is met with the cries of ‘but you look so much better!’, only to
respond ‘I don’t want to look better’. We settle on an understanding
that while ‘it may only be paint’, looking after yourself, and simply feeling
able to show your face, is an important part of recovery.
While some plot-points towards the end of the production
risk tying it up in a neat little clichéd bow, for the most part this play is
carried by its fantastic cast. Is a vital chance for the women of Aberfan to
finally have their say: with not a single female on the committee of the
Disaster Fund, this social group is the only place for these ladies to use
their voice. Both their laughter and their tears are infectious, affecting the
audience throughout. The theatre programme pulls out a prominent quote from Rona:
‘in forty or fifty years no one’s going to remember what happened here anyway’,
Now, I certainly will.
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