I have just returned from the second night of Le Dernier Caravanserail, a six-hour group devised piece of theatre told in two parts.
It is a massive undertaking: an ensemble of 38 people, countless scene changes, incredible props, all from France. In the end, I think it was too long, but the stories they are telling – of journeys, over torture, of escape, of endurance, of cruelty and hope – are too precious and important to be skimmed.
There aren’t too many happy vignettes in this play. And Australia does not come off well – nor should we.
Some interesting choices were made in the set, which made this more than just another refugee tale. Billowing silk forms a sea, and desperate folk attempt crossings – and it’s all intensely believable. Helicopters sound and uniformed, helmeted guards are winched out from a slot in the floor at the front of the stage to be slid across and announce to the boat “Turn back. Australia does not accept you’ This same slot in the floor is later the train tracks in the Eurotunnel, where people cut through barbed wire fences to try to grab onto the train as it passes. So many stories in one place: Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Serbia, the French Red Cross refugee camp at Sangatte, Chechnya, Russia… and a fascinating thing: the props, the sets, the actors were all wheeled around the set on little platforms and in between set pieces, the stage hands would race up and down the ramps and from wing to wing seemingly crossing at random. The wheels give me the sense that everybody’s lives are driven by others, that these people are not driving their own paths. And the seasons and countries indicated by different trees, also on wheeled platforms, bare branches for winter, flame-leaved for autumn, gum tree green in Australian summer.
So well done, such attention to detail in the characterisation, in the multiple languages spoken and the poignant translations projected as subtitles onto parts of props and set. And such touching, heart-breaking letters from Nadereh, one of the women who was a source for these stories, and songs, of life and hope interspersed with revolting men forcing women to work as sex-workers because they don’t speak the language, don’t have a passport and are supposedly ‘paying off’ their passage…
And then… across the way from where we were, Little Johnny Howard was holding some Prime Ministerial Awards. A large group of people were outside protesting… but I went in to the play instead. Still a little uncomfortable about that decision.