You for Me for You, Royal Court Theatre | reviews, news & interviews
You for Me for You, Royal Court Theatre
You for Me for You, Royal Court Theatre
New drama about two North Korean sisters is vividly staged, but lacks deep emotion
North Korea is the kind of place that haunts the imagination of the West – and not in a good way. One of the last hardline Communist dictatorships, it is also a country of immense sadness, a landscape of food shortages and human-rights abuses. Yet its regime calls this dismal place the "Best Nation in the World". To us, it’s a secret world, a strange culture difficult to comprehend, easy to fear.
In the first scene the older sister, Minhee, and her sibling Junhee are celebrating the new year, but the cupboard has been bare for a long time, and their repast is depressingly meagre. As each tries to persuade the other to eat more, the themes of sisterly sacrifice is introduced. Soon after, when they arrive at the border with China, they have to decide which one will cross first. In the event, they are separated, and the rest of the play tells two parallel stories, following each of the sisters on their individual quests.
It is a surreal and satirical evening
In a flash during which the space-time continuum is torn, Junhee finds herself in the United States, and struggles to make a living and then save enough money to return to North Korea to find her sister. Meanwhile, Minhee searches the country for her lost son, her lost husband and her lost life. It is a surreal and satirical evening, in which the two very different societies are both criticised. While the fast life of America is contrasted with the limitless waiting of North Korea, and endless choice with no choice, there are some lovely moments. Trees grow ears in a humorous visual metaphor of the surveillance state, and Junhee’s confusion on arriving in the Land of the Free is shown using the device of having the American characters speak gibberish, which she struggles to comprehend.
One vivid creation is the monstrous Liz, a caricature composite of people that Junhee encounters as she starts work in New York. As the stories freewheel along, we are introduced to musical rice, larger-than-life teddy bears and Wade, a black American newcomer from the South. At one point, rice (yes, rice!) performs a choreographed Busby Berkeley dance, while at another a field of Kimjongilia flowers need harvesting. The rhetoric of politically correct obedience in both North Korea and America is amusingly parodied.
But while I admired the imaginative flair of this magical realism, I was also conscious that the element of fantasy made it hard to connect with the deeper emotions of the people in the story. When anything is possible, what’s at stake? In this postmodern universe, the leaps and bounds of the narrative are enjoyably impressive but I felt an absence of profounder feeling. For me, this is a show that is more entertaining than moving – and that feels a bit wrong.
On the other hand, it is hard to fault Richard Twyman’s well-judged and colourful production (pictured above), which zips along for 90 minutes, criss-crossing the globe with amazing ease and a full technicolour palette. With a versatile mirror set by Jon Bausor, and super video projections by Tal Rosner, there are endless delights for the eye. At the same time, Katie Leung (Junhee) and Wendy Kweh (Minhee) explore the intense relationship between the sisters, while Daisy Haggard and Paapa Essiedu give life to Liz and Wade. In support, Kwong Loke and Andrew Leung play a dozen characters, from frog to disembodied voice. In the end, this is a play that appealed more to my eyes than to my heart.
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