So we went to see Tom Stoppard's Indian Ink.
In the first ever production of the play, Felicity Kendal had played the young poet, Flora Crew, travelling around India.
At the age of 79, she was also in the production we saw at the Hampstead Theatre, playing Flora's elderly sister, Eleanor Swan, remembering Flora in the past.
We enjoyed this immensely; the play was full of typically Stoppardian musing, and the cast were very strong. This time, Flora was played by Ruby Ashbourne Serkis (Gollum's daughter).
Some of us were a critical of Stoppard's picture of India from the standpoint of a white Englishman (although Stoppard did spend some time at boarding school in Darjeeling, that probably didn't provide much real insight). However, others thought he got away with it via the character of Eldon Pike - the American academic who is trying to publish Flora's Collected Letters. He misunderstands and makes assumption about her life - and Stoppard uses him to recognise the likely errors in his own presentation, (or so some of us thought).
At one point, Flora mentions pouring a jug of water on the critic JC Squire's head, after he panned her poetry. Squire is a name we know from his book of essays "If it had Happened Otherwise" (1931) which have been considered proto-alternative histories. According to Wikipedia, he moved further and further to the right through his life. Despised by most of the Bloomsbury set, he eventually became associated with Moseley.
Meanwhile the Rajah mentions 'Bendor Westminster' - the Duke of Westminster and one of the many Grosvenors, who for a long time have used the name Bendor. And it seems Chaucer, years ago, had a hand in that. But that is for another time...
But those two small instances only reinforce the complex series of references and allusions in the play.
Very good.

No comments:
Post a Comment