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Review : Sive

By Siobhán Breatnach

Sive

An Irish Network of Dramatic Arts presentation of a play by John B Keane

Directed by Tom Begley.

Tom Begley’s interpretation of John B Keane’s Sive looks unpretentiously at the complexities of match-making, marriage and money alongside the conflicts of greed, lust and love.

A tragic folk story set in 1950s rural Ireland the play is an archetypal Irish tale set in a farmhouse kitchen.

Young and beautiful Sive (Lucy De Brún) is an orphan who lives with her uncle Mike (John Casey), his crafty wife Mena (Susan Cummins) and her Nanna (Ingrid Evans) in the remote Kerry boglands.

But when salacious old farmer Sean Dotá (Tony Barber) expresses an interest in the girl and offers to pay for her hand in marriage she becomes nothing more than a money pawn in the plans of match-maker Tomasheen Sean Rua (John Morrissey).

But Sive’s heart belongs to the handsome Liam Scuab (Dylan McDonough) and even her caring, if overly subdued, uncle Mike is powerless to stop Tomasheen hatching a plan with money-obsessed Mena to be rid of his niece and mother.

In Mena, Keane has created a character who is totally void of compassion, driven by her own wants and needs and which inevitably is the result of living a life full of regret.

But under the direction of Begley, Cummins avoids becoming the farcical shrieking hag and instead sparks well with stage husband Casey — who embodies the struggles of a man trying to keep his family at peace with ease and grace.

The intimate surroundings of the White Bear Theatre allow the play to infiltrate the senses and it’s hard not to connect with the characters and their individual struggles.

Lucy de Brún as Sive captures the utter hopelessness of a girl left with no choices and no future — save in the arms of a doddering leach.

And as her girlish charms diminish into a steady stream of sobbing Mena’s manipulation grows — she shows little remorse for telling the young girl lies about her dead parents so that she will feel obliged to marry Sean Dotá.

Parallel to the story of Sive’s struggles is the hateful relationship between Mena and Nanna — and as you would expect both are wrapped up in a loathsome and venomous daughter/mother-in-law cliché.

But despite Nanna’s scorn and disgust for what is happening (a sentiment that is echoed by the audience), Keane’s script leaves her feeble, frail and unable to intervene.

Breaking from Sive’s heartache and the scheming Mena are musical travellers Pats Bocock and Cathleen Bocock (Seán Brosnan and Katherine Pageon) who add a sense of foreboding and doom to the story when they arrive at various intervals during the play singing Irish songs and begging for money.

They hint at bygone traditions and Irish culture of yesteryear in preparation for a forlorn end to Sive’s tale.

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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