MOONLIGHT

The Maskers presented Moonlight by Harold Pinter and directed by Ron Stannard in the Maskers Studio Theatre fron 23 March to 27th March 2004.

Moonlight was first performed at the Almeida Theatre in September 1993 and was described in The Sunday Times as 'one of Pinter's most haunting works, studded with brutally and swaggeringly funny jokes'.

After ten years of politically-committed drama, it marked Pinter's return to familiar themes of loss, failure of communication and the battleground of family life; but it also introduced new concerns about death and the loss of children, which seem to spring directly from Pinter's own experience.  It explores all of these with a mix of passion and knock-about humour, which results in a moving yet richly comic play, in which the weight of the past, the fear of the future and the unanswered need for reconciliation and closure loom large; and in which the hunger of communication between the members of a divided family and between the living and the dead is an insistent motif.

Andy, bedridden and tended by his wife, Bel, rages against the dying of the light and longs for reunion with his estranged sons, Jake and Fred, who pass their days (and hide their hurt) in a protective cocoon of cross-talk routines and fantasy games - about the father with whom they are totally obsessed.  Hovering above and between is the haunting figure of their dead sister, Bridget, whose cryptic speeches open and close the play.

Such a brief summary, perhaps, begs more questions than it answers; but Pinter is not in the business of providing easy solutions or the comfort of the 'well-made play'.  Instead, he gives us a sardonic and intensely-felt poetic work in seventeen scenes - a single movement piece which moves back and forth across the stage (and thus across the family divide) in a complex echo of regret and recrimination in which mockery is used as a kind of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation for languishing spirits.  Ultimately, the play's enigmatic structure and open-ended conclusions allow us to take from it whatever chimes with our own experience.

In an interview, Pinter said '. . . salt, vinegar and mustard exist in the play.  In other words, there are a few laughs'.  Indeed, there are - and more than a few, I hope, for in Moonlight Pinter confirms that his wit and agile command of the uses of language are undiminished.

Photographs by courtesy of Clive Weeks ( www.cwphotos.co.uk )

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The Cast

           Andy            Albie Minns
           Bel            Sheana Carrington
           Jake            Matt Avery
           Fred            Steven Tizzard
           Maria            Meri Mackney
           Ralph            Ken Spencer
           Bridget            Alex Austin

The Crew

           Production Manager             Helen White
           Stage Manager             Andrew Smith
           Set Design and Construction             Ken Spencer, Roger Lockett
           Lighting Design             Nathan Weeks
           Lighting Operator             Ivan White
           Sound             Lawrie Gee
           Sound Operator             Jez Minns
           Props and Furniture             Ella Lockett, Gill Buchanan
           Publicity Manager             Angie Stansbridge
           Programme Design             Carla Evans