
[Re]View From The House: By Some Divine Mistake
By Some Divine Mistake
Written and directed by Joan Bryans
Vital SparkTheatre
Jericho Arts Centre
Oct 10 to Nov 1, 2008
Paul Toolan as Rattenbury, Vanessa Parent as Alma and Kevin Kraussler as Stoner in By Some Divine Mistake. Photo Sandy McKellar
Vancouver, BC: As the subject for her new play, Vancouver writer and director, Joan Bryans has chosen to focus on a femme fatale with an early 20th century British Columbia connection. The story certainly offers great potential for a play, as indeed Terence Rattigan found, in 1977 writing his final play, Cause Celebre, about the Rattenbury murder trial.
Alma Pakenham Rattenbury married Francis Rattenbury, designer, among other buildings, of Victoria's B.C. Legislature and the venerable Empress hotel. Although his first marriage was wrecked long before he met Alma, the divorce and the thirty year difference in their ages was a great source for gossip. After their marriage they moved to Bournemouth. Alma began an affair with George Stoner, a 17 year old boy hired as handyman and chauffeur. When Rattenbury was murdered, Alma and Stoner were tried for the murder. Stoner was found guilty.
Bryans picks the story up from the first meeting of Alma (Vanessa Parent) with Rattenbury (Paul Toolan) in the Empress Hotel, in Victoria. There is a delightful little scene where a group of "friends" watch Alma dancing with the instantly-infatuated Rattenbury and cluck away like a crowd of gossipy hens. The action then moves to the Rattenbury home Bournemouth where we see the aging Rattenbury becoming increasingly irascible and uninterested in Alma. Her career as a song writer flourishes but she becomes increasingly frustrated with her husband, relying initially for company on Irene (Kerry Constable), her maid. Enter a young virile Stoner (Kevin Kraussler) and the outcome was sort of inevitable.
The story is narrated partly through the use of Questioner / Accusers, played by Dick Pugh, Hamish Cameron and Laureen E. Smith, in tony British accents, foreshadowing the actual trial. They also play several other roles. Other cast members also playing multiple roles include Beth Coleman and Albano Carreiro, with voiceovers by John Harris, Derek Carr and Connor Wilkinson.
Obviously someone writing today about these events can only speculate about the reality but I did not feel that the play offered much insight into the characters of Alma or George. What attracted Alma to the boy? Was it purely sexual? What was the power relationship between the two? What could have possibly prompted the murder? Who really struck the fatal blow? Who incited it? As well, in the attempt to convey information, I feel that the need to sustain suspense was lost. There was little build up of tension so that the final dramatic scene had minimal impact.
I wonder whether the play would benefit from an outside director who is less invested in the script than the writer would naturally be. A fresh eye might provide a dramaturgical perspective that would tighten up the script. I remember an editor telling me that the most important lines to consider cutting are usually your absolute favorite words - that breathtaking prose that looks poetic on the page but does little to move the story forward.



Comments
By Some Divine Mistake
Alma pursues her high risk affair(s) without regard to the wagging tongues of polite society. In this respect, her life parallels that of Elizabeth Smart, the author of By Grand Central Station, I Sat Down and Wept. Smart flaunted the conventions of her time through her life long affair with a married man. Unlike Alma, though, Smart comes across as a heroine who puts love ahead of all else including her art. Alma, on the other hand, comes across as an artist composer who seeks inspiration for her work from the titillation of ill considered shallow affairs. The absence of true passion in the lives of the principal characters renders implausible the crime of passion. No one had a good reason to bump off poor old Rats. Perhaps, I wouldn't be so hard on Alma if her name were Roberta Burns and she had gained notoriety for innumerable sexual trysts. As for the play itself, I think there is a good story there rich in dramatic possibilities. The players did a good job with what they had to work with. I would like to see what they could do with a pared down script which played up the macro rhythm of social turbulence, drew a stronger contrast between Rats and Alma and developed a more plausible relationship with Stoner.