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A CurtainUp London Review
Black Milk by Lizzie Loveridge
Stranded at a railway station in a small town in the provinces are Muscovites, wide boy, trader and conman, Lyovchick (Paul Ready) and his very pregnant girlfriend Poppet (Sarah Cattle). Lyovchick has been "giving away" toasters to the local population. The snag is that the delivery charge is four times the cost of the toaster. We are given an economic picture of the town by the Ticket Clerk (Suzan Sylvester), an incomer, who brews and sells black market vodka. Poppet goes into labour and is cared for by a local woman Auntie Pasha, (Di Botcher) while Lyovchick moves on to another town. After the birth of her child Poppet, now called by her proper name of Shura, undergoes a transformation and wants to stay in the small community on Lyovchick's return for her. Lyovchick resists and in a powerful final scene harangues and punches Poppet and threatens the baby until cowed, she agrees to return to Moscow. The milk of the title is a smashed bottle of milk for the baby provided by Auntie Pasha, presumably a metaphor for the break up of society and community. The scene is set by a narrator (Gary Oliver), who holding a torch under his face in darkness, describes the station waiting room as if he were an honest estate agent. There is this sense of isolation, of being in the middle of nowhere in this dirty, unwelcoming room. Poppet blasts onto the scene with "What the fucking hell are we doing in this shit hole?" I liked the motley procession of the local residents each clutching their blue toaster as they line up to ask for a refund that they will not get from Lyovchick. Although the performances are sound, Paul Ready seemed not to have completely mastered the brutality and cynicism of his character Lyovchick. Poppet undergoes a transformation, although this is very well acted by Sarah Cattle, it seems unlikely that she should go from chain smoking, four letter word spouting tart to sweet young mother in the space of ten days. There is fine support from Di Botcher as earth mother, the saintly Auntie Pasha, who refuses all payment and a rich cameo from Sheila Reid as Petrovna, a wily widow who is first to try to get back the money she paid for the toaster. This play is unlikely to get sponsorship from the Russian Tourist Authority given the bleak and hopeless picture it gives of life in Russia today. Sigarev's characters use gutter speak, this is not the language of Chekhov, but his characters take something from the Russian tradition.
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