Our Country's Good

Timberlake Wertenbaker's Our Country's Good is a moving and funny play, but most of all it is a cry of triumph for the power and enduring worth of theatre and it ends on a heart-lifting note. Dealing with the story of the first play to be performed on Australian soil to an audience of convicts, gaolers, Officers and marines of the fleet by a cast of convicts, it follows the development of the play and the convict players.

Review:

Our Country’s Good “is a moving play about the power of theatre to transform and unite people and follows a cast of convicts and their director, Lieutenant Ralph Clark, freshly arrived in the new penal colony, as they attempt to put on a play - The Recruiting Officer - against a backdrop of violence and starvation.

Although the cast of our production didn’t face quite the same odds as the convicts themselves, it was a challenge for all involved, being so different to the usual Little Theatre fare.  For some of the cast it was their first play, and many had two (if not three!) very contrasting roles, playing both jailer and prisoner.  The animosity between the officers and the convicts, and also within the two groups, was well portrayed, my favourite scene being the one in which the officers all discuss whether or not the play should go ahead, with characters talking over each other and insults being thrown.  The vulnerability of certain characters was also well acted – Ken Edmonds as the repressed Lieutenant Ralph Clark, Fraser Wall as the insecure hangman Ketch Freeman, and Nick Barlow as Harry Brewer, who slowly descends into madness, haunted by the ghosts of convicts he has sent to the gallows.  Susie Tookey was superb as Liz Modern, the volatile convict given a part in the play against the odds, particularly in her speech at the beginning of Act 2 where she tells her life story in full 18th century criminal slang.  Light relief came in the form of the convict Sideway (Mark Foster), gloriously hamming it up in all the rehearsals.  Gordon Scott played out of type as the terrifying Major Ross, determined to stop the play, and Lesley Ricketts had a hilarious cameo role as ‘Meg’.

 

The set was simple – a raised white platform on a blacked out stage represented a ‘blank canvas’ and heightened the idea of the ‘play within a play’ and back projection and lighting were used to suggest different settings and moods, from the darkness in the hold of the ship, to the scorching heat of the Australian sun.  The clever simplicity of the set  serve to heighten the intensity of the action on stage and the actors played their parts superbly.

Of course, the play ultimately has a happy ending – the final scene showed beautifully how all the characters had been transformed by the experience, working together and supporting each other, and they perform The Recruiting Officer to a large and enthusiastic audience of convicts and officers. It was a powerful and moving drama and shows the quality of the productions that are performed even when out of our normal “comfort zone”.

 

Show dates: 06/07/2011 - 09/07/2011

Cast and Crew

GroupRoleMember Name
Production TeamDirectorLois Harbinson
Production TeamStage ManagerCharlie Watkins
Production TeamProducerGordon Scott
CrewLighting and SoundPete Ross
CrewStage HandCatherine Tucker
PublicityProgrammeElly Milln
WardrobeCostumesSue Scott
CrewPropertiesLesley Ricketts
SetDesignCatherine Tucker
WardrobeCostumesKate Hathway
WardrobeMake UpHelen Makin
WardrobeMake UpJulie Makin
Production TeamMusic ConsultantSheila Ross
CastCaptain Arthur PhillipFrank Edgeller
CastCaptain Jemmy CampbellNick Barlow
CastSecond Lieutenant Ralph ClarkKen Edmonds
CastLieutenant Will DawesAnna Friend
CastDabby BryantCarol Phillimore
CastMeg SmithLesley Ricketts
CastMajor Robbie RossGordon Scott
CastCaptain Watkin TenchSam Willetts
CastSecond Lieutenant William FreddySusie Tookey
CastLieutenant Geroge JohnstonLucy Payne
CastReverend JohnsonFraser Wall
CastCaptain David CollinsMark Foster
CastMidshipman Harry BrewerNick Barlow
CastJohn ArscottSam Willetts
CastCaesarLen Sweales
CastKetch FreemanFraser Wall
CastRobert SidewayMark Foster
CastJohn WisehammerFrank Edgeller
CastMary BrenhamAnna Friend
CastLiz MordenSusie Tookey
CastDuckling SmithLucy Payne
CastVoice of the AborigineNick Barlow
CrewPromptSue Scott
CrewStage HandMike Scammell
CrewStage HandTony Hathway
SetConstructionTony Hathway
SetConstructionRoger Reeson
SetConstructionJames Wiltshire
SetConstructionMick Quirk
SetConstructionMike Scammell
PublicityPublicityKen Edmonds
PublicityPhotographyArik Casey