Reviewed by Richard Lane
May 2016
Sylvie (Anita Canala) uncompromisingly wanted a baby, Janice ( Heather Riley) had five too many, and Tiffany( Laura Antoniazzi ) didn’t want one at all. Lily (Lesley Reed ) had no relationship with her son and Mr Causeway (Brian Godfrey) employer of the women, “mother henned” all four of his “girls” in his on-line sex toy call centre, Aphrodite.
Playwright Anna Longaretti reveals that the play is “completely personal “ and we see as the plot unfolds her exploration of motherhood, the competition between the women and the desperation they each experience . In between taking calls for “titivators and rotating pearl g-strings” the women one- by- one reveal their attitudes to motherhood.
Director Warren McKenzie has put together a competent show, but is let down to a certain extent by the logistics of the of the Marion Cultural Centre stage and also the overall set design.
The stage is inordinately long and narrow, which does not assist the layout of the design. The four women’s desks lined up across front, down stage, inhibit to a significant degree the options for stage movement, obliging the blocking to be mostly lateral. The incidental music worked well, as did the lighting in the passage of time sequences.
Lesley made the most of her tragi-comic role as Lily the woman in a loveless marriage with a son who rejected her and Laura was the sexy single girl Tiffany scorning the loss of independence due to pregnancy. Heather made us quite aware that her married life was not what every woman hoped it would be, and Anita played the sharpish Sylvie well although her French accent was not always consistent.The experienced Brian Godfrey gave a performance of the boss Mr Causeway in a rather Benny Hill-ish style, but nonethelesss showed his love for Lily.