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WSWS : Arts
Review : Theater
To explore another level of society
Hotel Obsino writer Adam Broinowski speaks with WSWS
By Richard Phillips
11 December 2007
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Writer and director Adam Broinowski spoke with the World
Socialist Web Site about Hotel Obsino, which was recently
staged at the La Mama Theatre as part of this years Melbourne
Fringe Festival. (See Hotel Obsino:
inner-city poverty and despair)
Broinowski began his stage career in 1994 and has performed
in Australia, Britain, South America and various Asian countries,
including Japan, Malaysia, Korea and Singapore. A research fellow
at the University of Tokyo from 2003-2005, he studied Japanese
avant-garde theatre during the 1920s and 1930s and the post-WWII
period and has been a member of Gekidan Kaitaisha (Theatre of
Deconstruction), the Tokyo-based experimental theatre company.
Richard Phillips: Could you explain something about your plays
background and subject matter?
Adam Broinowski: I chose the subject
because I was living in Fitzroy [an inner city Melbourne suburb]
in 1999 and began noticing an increase in the number of heroin
addicts. There is always heroin around but it had become very
visible. At the same time there were numbers of people being released
from mental institutions by Jeff Kennett [then Liberal state premier].
They were basically being put onto the streets with no protection,
preparation or care and so they were wandering around not knowing
what to do with themselves. Many had been institutionalised for
long periods and didnt really know how to survive.
Id discovered the Hotham Hotel and was interested in
the architecture and history of the building and thought this
would be a place where these sorts of people would be staying.
A friend and I had previously made a sound sculpture of the building
and the immediate environment, but I actually wanted to meet the
people inside and find out what they were liketo learn about
their opinions and what kind of lives they were leading.
I was looking for a different view of society and presenting
things that were not generally being portrayed in theatre. I wanted
stories that had some guts to them and were not just about middle
class characters preoccupied with their own personal relationships,
which seems to be a constant in contemporary theatre. Theatre
used to be a politicised mediumit has this natural potentialand
so I wanted to bring a sense of this back into theatre and to
explore another layer of society.
RP: You started on this in 1999 but then left the idea for
a while?
AB: Yes. I went overseas, wrote another play, worked with a
theatre company in Japan for five years and was busy doing other
things. The show was also Melbourne-based and particular to Australian
audiences and so I couldnt really do it anywhere else. But
it always frustrated me that I wasnt able to stage it because
I felt it had a strong script.
RP: The characters are largely cut off from events and context.
Dave says that he misses Pentridge prison, which is now closed,
but not much of the external world makes its way into the hotel.
Was that deliberate?
AB: It was a dramatic device to develop the intensity of the
narrative and in some ways to contain the characters, whose existence
is at a different pace and reality, either because of drugs or
their general lifestyle. Theyre outsiders and isolated.
Their only contact with the outside world is through institutionsthe
police, the health services, the soup vans or community servicesand
I was trying to emphasise this.
RP: Their plight, of course, is a direct result of government
policy decisions, Liberal and Labor, to shut down mental health
facilities. In the program notes you describe society as a
system that lacks not resources, only care. Could you elaborate?
AB: I meant that Australia is not a poor country. We have all
sorts of resources at our disposal and shouldnt have any
homeless people. We are very rich but choose not to put these
resources into looking after people who are not otherwise disadvantaged.
Societys values are upside down.
RP: The problem is we dont control these
resources. Theyre in the hands of a tiny and very wealthy
elite.
AB: Yes. Its a society which follows a profit-led, capitalist
economic system and one driven by personal gain.
RP: Could you define Noahs relationship to the setting?
Was he meant to be a detached observer or supposed to change the
relationship between the residents? I found him a rather under-developed
character.
AB: A lot of people have said that and I guess it is a mixture
of how it was played and how it was written. Yes, he could have
been further fleshed out, but I didnt want to focus on him
so much. He was a ciphera kind of promptwho could
only come alive in response to the other characters. Id
worked in rehearsal on the other characters a lot, and to some
extent ran out of time on his responses and reactions to the others.
Its difficult because the idea was to have a neutral
observer, but one whose neutrality expressed a kind of moral ambiguity.
I wanted to show how this sort of character can be quite calculating
and removedengaged with the characters but not engaged on
their level. A bit like when middle class people get in touch
with this layer but tend to treat them like specimens. That was
the idea behind it.
RP: The program notes refer to growing fear and paranoia.
How have things changed since you wrote the play in 1999?
AB: I really felt this in 1999 because it was all around me
in the hotel and in everyday life, so to some extent not much
has changed. We know how paranoia is whipped up in order to have
an outcome that the politicians and others want, but I guess Im
also alluding to how these methods have expanded. It certainly
started in 1999, or earlier, but the changes that came from Australian
involvement in the Iraq war, for example, are on a much larger
scale. This trickles down through society as a whole and tends
to make people much more defensive and scared of anything that
is slightly different or unusual.
I dont mean to suggest that my show is just a mirrorthat
would be very unBrechtianbut Id like to say that it
is a distorted mirror in that there is a hierarchy in the hotel,
which might also reflect the way race and power work in Australia.
Obviously this is in a very broad and indirect sense, but there
is certainly something that is recognisable.
RP: Have these pressures impacted on writers and artists? The
censorship laws are certainly now more restrictive.
AB: Yes, and there is a certain self-censorship by some artists
who probably believe that if they speak out clearly and politically
they will be excluded and not get a government grant or whatever.
Others might feel that it wont be popular to present something
that is slightly harder, harsher or clearer about society on stage.
Its almost as if some artists have become scared of their
own voices, which is a real problem.
RP: Have you felt this sort of pressure?
AB: In a subtle, indirect way. It generally means that you
dont get your show picked up by a larger producer or theatre.
They basically try to ignore you, which is debilitating because
you cant develop unless you get some sort of community response.
RP: Whats been the response to Hotel Obsino?
AB: I was pleased with the reaction. It sold out for the last
week and there were always people who hung around at the end wanting
to talk about the show. They were obviously stimulated and interested,
which was encouraging.
RP: How readily did the play translate into Japanese?
AB: The difficulties were in the nuances of cultural meanings.
The Aboriginal character speaking in a certain way, for example,
doesnt really translate into Japanese, unless you make the
character Ainu. The play is about people from so many different
cultural backgrounds and accents, that it is difficult to do in
Japanese, apart from making the language rougher. Some things
worked and other didnt, but we didnt try to find all
the cultural equivalents.
RP: Im guessing that youre fond of films by Japanese
director Shohei Imamura, who focused much of his work on the most
oppressed sections of society?
AB: Yes. Just before he died he made a good short film in response
to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack on the US. It was part
of a collection by a whole number of directors. His was about
a returning Japanese soldier who turns into a snake, which is
very interesting.
Imamura came out of the Japanese New Wave in the 1960s, a group
which was critical of the war and of the American occupation and
the Japanese administration. The Theatre of Deconstruction had
some connections with this group. Imamura remained politically
engaged throughout and didnt fall for the eye-candy approach
to cinema.
RP: How do you see things developing in Australian theatre
and your future work?
AB: Its tricky coming back from another country and takes
time to fit back in or find what your role is. I want to continue
working the way that I have been up till now, that is, to engage
with social themes on a deeper levelnot like journalismbut
in a way that resonates, and present perspectives that people
may not have thought of.
Film and television does some things better in terms of social
realism and using factual material, but theatre provides a valuable
opportunity to bring important issues together in a live setting
and somehow transform that space, so that the audience comes out
with a slightly different perspective. Hopefully this experience
gets them to think about the issues raised in the show and more
deeply about their own lives.
See Also:
Hotel Obsino: inner-city poverty
and despair
[11 December 2007]
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