Dropped | The Goods Theatre CompanyLeft – Deborah Galanos and Olivia Rose.

Hopeless.

Early on in Katy Warner's play Dropped, Hope is buried.

Hope is figuratively and literally, a casualty of war, one infanticide among many, interred in a Middle Eastern midden, guarded by two Australian infantrywomen, brilliantly played by Deborah Galanos and Olivia Rose.

For sixty searing minutes we are in the company of these women as they crack wise and fantasise about the life they might have, could have, had, if they hadn't followed this brilliant career-path. They've been dropped in it alright, and apparently dropped by their command, who are unwilling to either evacuate civilians or extract their soldiers.

And here they are, like a desert fatigued Vladimir and Estragon. No bare single tree here, though. Rather a treeless mound of misery. In usual testosterone territory, oestrogen reigns. The maternal is the eternal, a sorority of two looking out for each other and the innocents of conflict. Succour the little children is their motto, in their reality and their fantasy.

The sombre sight of tiny shoes exhumed from the dirt reminds one of part of Kurtz's speech from Apocalypse Now, but instead of a little pile of inoculated arms, we are presented with a pile of tiny footwear, little feet defeated, toes turned up before their time.

Coming so close to Christmas, Dropped could be seen as an absurdist nativity play. Set in the desert, a time and place suffering a scourge against children these two women conjure a miracle birth, an infant wrapped in swaddling clothes. No wise men bearing gold, frankincense and myrrh here, though, and the silent night is not holy. The soldiers are two Marys looking for a Joseph, they have been forsaken, a pair bound to patrol a perimeter of no discernible strategic importance.

Snowflakes descend. Is it Christmas? Are they snowflakes, or the incinerated remains of combat's collateral damage?

Lisa Mimmocchi's simple sandpit set strewn with stones and infant footwear is strikingly good, augmented by Verity Hampson's lighting with its shades of stark and subtle among the sand and stubble.

Dropped gives pause about putting boots on foreign soil. For what purpose? Tread carefully.


The Goods Theatre Company in association with Red Line Productions presents
DROPPED
by Katy Warner

Direction by Anthony Skuse

Venue: Old Fitz Theatre, 129 Dowling Street (Cnr Cathedral Street), Woolloomooloo
Dates: 8 – 20 December, 2015
Tickets: $35 – $25
Bookings: www.oldfitztheatre.com/dropped




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