StarsStarsStarsStarsStars

Odd Man Out

Romance does not go entirely smoothly at the hands of David Williamson, whose latest play lacked subtlety and finesse.
[This is archived content and may not display in the originally intended format.]

Image supplied courtesy Ensemble Theatre

Australian playwright David Williamson has had forty-five plays produced over the course of his illustrious career. He is best known for his acerbic wit and social satire. The latest 2017 play, Odd Man Out, launched this week at the Ensemble Theatre, follows the character Alice (Lisa Gormley), a thirty-eight year old woman whose biological clock is ticking. Against her better judgement she falls for Ryan (Justin Stewart Cotta) whom she meets on the bus who turns out to have Aspergers syndrome. This affects his ability to socialise appropriately. She sets out to socially condition him, to help him fit into societal norms. The Ensemble media blurb suggests this happens with ‘hilarious and disastrous results.’

The trouble is, the dialogue of this new play, by such an eminent writer and as part of a play which was launched as a world premiere, was not witty or clever or funny. It came across as a little bit mean to poke jabs at a woman’s desperation to have children before it’s too late.

Why must we laugh at her predicament, if she is self-aware? Likewise, the dialogue is written to make fun of Ryan’s eccentric desire to tell the blunt truth. Is it really okay to laugh at an Asperger sufferer’s predicament either? I just couldn’t laugh along.

When satire and acerbic wit work well, there is subtlety in the text. Sometimes this is created through misunderstandings or bad timing or even running gags. Often satire is achieved when the character is unaware how ridiculous they are, so a comic connection is drawn with the audience, who can see the kinds of personality flaws that the character cannot. However, we were not given that opportunity because the character of Alice is also given the role of narrator.

Action is frequently frozen so that Alice can meta-fictively ‘stage whisper’ to the audience about Ryan’s condition, its precise details and how she is going to try and fix it. Again there is no irony here. We, the audience, are not given a secret view of the characters. We are merely lectured about Aspergers and given spoiler notifications of what is going to happen next.

This was the opening night (John Bell from Bell/Shakespeare was in attendance, as was actor Georgie Parker) and the actors’ nerves were possibly strung out. But, please. Constant hand-wringing? Constant pacing? Sounding on the verge of melodramatic tears…during every single line of the play?

Williamson’s great skill, in previous plays, has been his ability to create dialogue that creates its own tension. No need for hand-wringing or pacing. The subtlety used to be there in the veiled lies, the passive aggressive comments, the sadistic truths. These clever writing skills were absent from ‘Odd Man Out.’ I don’t believe many of us want to laugh at people with a developmental syndrome. Nor do we want to laugh at the generous loved ones who do their best to keep them socially assimilated. To do so, is a faux pas.

Rating: 2 stars out of 5

Odd Man Out
by David Williamson

Directed by ​Mark Kilmurry

Assistant Director: Samantha Young

Designed by Anna Gardiner

Lighting Designer: Christopher Page

Sound Designer: Alistair Wallace

Cast: Gael Ballantyne, Justin Stewart Cotta, Rachel Gordon, Lisa Gormley, Matt Minto & Bill Young.

Ensemble Theatre, Kirribilli (NSW)

​24 January – 19 March 2017

Prudence Gibson
About the Author
Dr Prudence Gibson is an academic; and an art and fiction writer. Her BioArt book Janet Laurence: The Pharmacy of Plants, UNSWPress, was published in 2015. Her research interests include Object Oriented Ontology and Speculative Realism. Her PhD investigated speculative art writing and she organised Aesthetics After Finitude, a conference and exhibition in 2015, to be a published anthology with re.press, Melbourne 2016. She has published fiction in Antipodes, Eureka Street, Etchings Journal and Blood. She is author of the art book The Rapture of Death, Boccalatte Publishing 2010 and has had over 300 art essays/articles published in Heat, The Australian, Vogue, Australian Art Collector and Art Monthly etc. Her curated exhibitions are The Carpentry of Speculative Things, Alaska Projects 2013 and The Pharmacy of Love and Hate MCA Artbar 2013. An exhibition and book, Plant Sentience and Art, are being developed for 2017.