
Ellida, a new adaptation of Ibsen’s The Lady from the Sea, is an ideal vehicle for WAAPA’s third-year acting students, David Zampatti says, and they tackle it with verve and skill.
Ellida (Zoë Taylor-Morgan) and Arnholm (Gulliver McGrath) talk about love and marriage in ‘Ellida’. Photo: Stephen Heath
Ellida, Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA) · Roundhouse Theatre, 25 March, 2021 ·
Ellida is an adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s play, The Lady from the Sea, which he wrote in 1888, just before he returned to his native Norway after a quarter-century of self-imposed exile in Italy and Germany. Sandwiched as it was between his most enduring works, A Doll’s House and The Wild Duck, Hedda Gabler and The Master Builder, it has never been highly regarded, and, in truth, the reasons for its relative obscurity are easy to see. The issues of societies transitioning into modernity and, especially, the position of women in them are there as they are in his greatest plays. But despite the psychological realism that made his works the model for playwrights from Strindberg and Chekhov to Miller, O’Neill and beyond, The Lady from the Sea’s comparative two-dimensionality and its sudden and melodramatic denouement consign it to the second rank of Ibsen’s work. It is, however, a made-to-order piece for WAAPA’s graduating class of acting students, and the eight-strong cast hoe into it with considerable verve and skill. The compact, straightforward dialogue in Australian playwright May-Brit Akerholt’s adaptation, renamed Ellida for, I guess, marketing purposes, helps them, as does Will O’Mahony’s uncluttered, shrewd direction. And happily, Alkerholt doesn’t play around with the original play’s place (a small mid-Norwegian fjord town) or time (late 19th century), the plot or the characters. Ellida (Zoë Taylor-Morgan) is the daughter of a lighthouse-keeper and the second wife of the town’s widower doctor, Wangel (Mitchell Tharle). She feels trapped and isolated in his family, with daughters Bolette (Emelia Corlett) and Hilde (Madeline Dona) from his first wife. The girls have suitors: Bolette’s is her former professor, Arnholm (Gulliver McGrath), and Hilde’s is a sickly artist, Lyngstrand (Sebastian Belmont). Their dalliances provide all the play’s humour and many of its insights into the gender politics of the time and place. Happy families: Dr Wangel (Mitchell Tharle), with his daughters, Bolette (Emelia Corlett, left), and Hilde (Madeline Dona). Photo: Stephen Heath
Ellida runs at the Roundhouse Theatre at WAAPA, Edith Cowan University, until 31 March, 2021.
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