Review
by Liam Murphy, Munster Express
Thursday, June 12th, 2008
Jim Daly’s
latest play for Waterford Youth Arts, I Can Hear The Night-Birds
Sing, is a beautiful gentle human story of a young boy's fears
of being forever blind as a result of an accident with a swan.
Despite any literary or mythic images, this is a triumph for the
cast of 12-14 year olds, who met the measure of the play with
maturity and genuine sympathy under the understated but well-thought-out
direction of James Rockett.
Set
in a hospital room, the work enables twenty young actors, in about
ten scenes, to explore genuine human and mundane aspects of confronting
a major life problem on the eve of exams. The work was never mawkish
or overly sentimental and a beautiful love story emerged like
a magic trick and I did not see it coming.
Diarmuid
Brennan was a revelation of the bandaged boy, Stephen, who has
so many fears to confront. Cillian Jacob was his chatty caring
brother, Andrew. Rhiannon Colbert’s Sara, another patient,
was an expert lesson in fine sympathetic acting. Orla Hayes surprised
me with her honesty and kind nature and she achieved a lot without
any wasted gesture or emotive work.
Three young hooligans, Drea Coady as Johnno, Michael Cooney as
Sammy and Stephen Thul’s Christo, brought snappy humour
to the play. Rachel Lavin was a joy as the forward, Martina.
Such
was Jim Daly’s accuracy of writing and James Rockett’s
skill as director, that some ethnic roles fitted exactly as were
in no way token or issue-driven. Tiffany Lukawsky was a fine Chloe,
Maikel Vos was an accurate Jan and Igor Frey as Thomasz was excellent.
Joey
Molloy, Megan Foley, Megan Connolly, Shauna Stokes, Olivia Keoghan,
Chloe Phelan, Jasmine Roche, Rachel Hendrick and India Harvey
made up the other performers. Jeannine Storan designed and costumed
with style and Richard Collins did light and sound.
This
is a play that Waterford should be very proud of.
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