'Drive Your Plow Over the Complicité from the novel by Olga Tokarczuk
21 April 2023
On Thursday night we were at the Belgrade Theatre in Coventry to see the Complicité production 'Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead' directed by Simon McBurney. The play is based on a novel by Olga Tokarczuk about a 65-year old woman in a rural community in Poland, close to the Czech border, who is appalled by the human disregard for animal life. She wages a personal campaign against the local hunting club and others who have abused and killed animals, many of whom start to meet their own gruesome deaths. But, this being Complicité, her story is told with wry humour and ambiguity through physical theatre performed by an incredible ensemble cast. It was worth the price of admission just to see the amazing Kathryn Hunter, who narrates the tale, leaning on a microphone stand like a stand-up comedian and is ever-present through this nearly three-hour production. Hunter is the most fascinating physical actor and her performance is a magnificent tour-de-force. She is assisted by a brilliant multinational cast, including the always compelling Tim McMullan, and César Sarachu as the slightly dopey neighbour Oddball. 'Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead' is a dark comic exploration of issues of animal rights, ecology and climate change, and it's great fun. With hardly any set, this is a narrative conjured up by human bodies, inventive lighting and projection and sumptuous sound design (by Christopher Shutt). It's a little too long and felt a bit repetitive at times but fans of Complicité will love this like an indulgent box of chocolates.
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