By Jonathan Grant
“Thirty going on thirteen†– an oft-used criticism of many a modern-day man – is the scenario being explored in the high-tempo adaptation of Gombozicz’s classic 1937 novel Ferdydurke by the radical Polish theatre Teatr Provisorium at the Bloomsbury Theatre.
Our central character, Joey, is sent back as an adult to re-experience his school days in 1930s Poland. Awoken on a Tuesday morning, classical music filling the stage and flanked by a four-posted cage symbolising his new bounded reality, our protagonist finds himself re-living his right of passage to adulthood.
Beginning his new-found immaturity in a militaristic Soviet school, being taught “enrapturing†literature ad nauseam by the buffoonish Professor FIlidor, Joey, like all his contemporaries, shows only an interest in the elemental questions of life, death and topics of a sexual nature.
This frustration at the obligatory repression served to all minors on the battleground of the intergenerational war, festers within him until the energy typical of teenage boys erupts in a highly energetic and expressionist style.
The energy continues to flow through Janusz Oprynski and Witold Mazurkiewicz’s production at each stage of Joey’s path to adulthood as each scene, each life chapter, is separated by a confused melee and transition to greater sexual consciousness and self-awareness. And, as Joey ages, he continues to bring to the audience’s attention the absurdity of society’s imposed expectations on the lives of individuals and the fundamental baseness of humanity by unifying castes under the banner of sexual promiscuity.
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