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WSWS : Arts
Review : Theater
and Dance
An imaginative and courageous political exposure
By Rebecca Ponsford and Richard Phillips
5 May 2005
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Two Brothers, written by Hannie Rayson, directed by Simon
Phillips and designed by Stephen Curtis
Two Brothers by Australian playwright Hannie Rayson
and currently being staged in Melbourne by the Melbourne Theatre
Company, is a naturalistic drama in which a terrible human tragedythe
drowning deaths of hundreds of refugeestears apart a family
that has previously been able to accommodate its political and
emotional differences. The family in question is not seeking asylum.
Rather, it is a prominent Australian family, the Benedicts, one
of whom is Canberras minister for homeland security.
Raysons play was inspired in part by the ongoing controversy
and cover-up of the tragic drowning of 353 refugees when a refugee
boat, the SIEV X (Suspected Illegal Entry Vehicle Number X), sank
in October 19, 2001. The play constitutes part of the growing
political opposition by Australian writers, actors and filmmakers
to Canberras mandatory detention and demonisation of asylum
seekers.
In September 2001, award-winning actors Alice Garner and Kate
Atkinson established Actors for Refugees. With support
from artists from major Australian theatre companies and television
productions, the group has staged school and community performances
dramatising some of the experiences of refugees seeking asylum
in Australia. In 2002, four writers compiled Kan Yama Kan,
an outline of refugee experiences performed by asylum seekers
themselves. The productions premiere season in Melbourne
sold out before it officially opened.
A year later Tom Zubrycki examined the fortunes of a group
of Afghan refugees in rural Australia in his film Molly &
Mobarak and ABC television produced the two-part drama Marking
Time. Written by playwright and satirist John Doyle, Marking
Time explores the relationship between a young Australian
student in a rural town and an Afghan refugee girl. And in 2004,
husband and wife filmmakers Clara Law and Eddie Fong made Letters
to Ali, a feature-length documentary challenging the governments
illegal detention of an Afghan child.
The significance of Two Brothers, however, is
that it is the first to venture beyond simply putting a
human face on asylum seekers and to attempt to address the
issue in terms of the policies and the parties responsible.
Rayson, a leading figure in Australian dramatic arts, has written
a number of intimate, intelligent and often witty family dramas
over the past 15 years. These grapple, variously, with Australians
sense of cultural isolation (Hotel Sorrento [1990]); the
impact of free market policies on tertiary education
(Life After George [2000]); and the economic dislocation
and growing political confusion in rural Australia (Inheritance
[2002]). A number of her plays have been performed in Germany,
France, Canada, Japan, Slovenia, New Zealand and Britain.
While her work explores a range of social and political issues,
Rayson, like a growing number of local artists, is deeply angered
about the SIEV X tragedy and Canberras brutal treatment
of asylum seekers and has resolved to use her creative talent
to provoke political discussion about them.
As she explained to the Age newspaper on April 19: Why
353 people drowned when the boat went down in a heavily watched
area of ocean is not at all transparent. The dimensions of this
tragedyand the unnerving sense that we are not being told
the whole truthis compounded by our cruel treatment of asylum
seekers, by the inhumanity of the Pacific Solution
and by mandatory detention.
To me there arent too many shades of grey in these
events. The suffering that we are inflicting on these people is
wrong. And that cruelty needs to be named.... We are living in
times when debate is not encouraged. ... [and] in this climate,
what is called for is bold provocation. Now is not the time for
timidity in our drama.
... And yes, I do hope that [Two Brothers] energises
the audience to ask questions about the real world. Three-and-a-half
years after Tampa, 54 people are still incarcerated on Nauru.
The misery and human damage our policies have inflicted on some
people will never be undone. The future must be different. My
play is a vision of what that future may be like if people of
goodwillwhatever their politicsdo not win the day.
Raysons play is by no means perfect, but her sincere,
intelligent and courageous exploration of these issues has produced
a work of genuine artistic merit. Together with director Simon
Phillips, she has created an intrinsically theatrical piece where,
particularly in the first act, short scenes, well-observed dialogue,
and an interweaving structure engage the audience in the characters
political and personal dilemmas and the inhumanity of their treatment.

Two Brothers opens with the murder of an Iraqi asylum
seekerHazem Al Ayad (Rodney Afif)with the first act
carefully drawing out the incidents that have led to the crime.
The Benedict brothers and their partners are introduced to
the audience with a series of short monologues. Each character
stands at the front of the stage addressing imaginary meetings.
For James Eggs Benedict (Garry McDonald), the minister
for home security, its the exclusive Melbourne Club, whose
members are some of the wealthiest and most powerful individuals
in the country.
Tom Benedict (Nicholas Eadie) is a community rights lawyer
and delegate to the opposition Australian Labor Party (ALP) conference.
His audience is the ALPs Coburg branch, a working class
suburb in Melbourne with a large immigrant population.
Eggs wife, Fiona (Diane Craig) addresses the private
girls school which so adequately prepared her for her future
as a dippy South Yarra blonde and the wife of a leading
conservative politician. Toms wife, Ange Sidoropoulos (Laura
Lattuada) teaches at a state high school where she is congratulating
the ethnically diverse range of students in her class on their
scholastic achievements.
Hints of the coming crisis emerge as the families enjoy a Christmas
Day gathering at the brothers jointly owned luxury beach
house. As small talk proceeds, Eggs receives an urgent official
phone call and then another from his son, Lachlan, a Gunnery Officer
in the Royal Australian Navy (RAN).
Over the next weeks, Tom and Ange learn about the tragic Christmas
day sinking of a refugee boatknown as the Kelepasanand
Tom becomes both friend and lawyer to the sole survivor, Hazem
Al Ayad, who has lost his wife and children in the disaster. Al
Ayads account of the drowning death of his wife and children,
obviously drawn from the testimony of some of the SIEV X survivors,
is powerful and deeply distressing.
Important political issues emerge as Rayson draws out the relationship
between the phone calls, the refugee boat disaster, Eggs
bid for prime ministership, and Canberras refugee policies.
Moreover, she skilfully interweaves these issues into an exposition
of the troubled relationship between the two brothers and a layered
exploration of the sources of their differences.
By the end of Act I, everyone knows that Lachlans ship
was in a position to rescue the refugees but was prevented from
doing so by directives from Eggs.
The second act deals with the political repercussions of this
decision and the unbridgeable differences between the two brothers
and their wives, as Eggs moves forward with ruthless determination
to become prime minister.
The play concludes with Eggs delivering a victory speech in
which border protection, the so-called war on terror,
free market rhetoric and various strands of right-wing nationalist
populism are interwoven.
Accusations of caricature
Various local theatre critics and political commentators for
the Murdoch press and the Age newspaper have denounced
Two Brothers as left-wing propaganda, caricature,
and accused Rayson of slandering the government and the Australian
navy. (See Media witch-hunts new
Australian play and Hannie Rayson, its author)
These attacks have nothing to do with the artistic quality
of Two Brothers but are crude, politically-motivated attempts
to intimidate Rayson and any other artist who dares to use their
skills to educate, provoke discussion and ultimately develop resistance
to the governments refugee policies.
Owen Richardson, an arts writer for the Age, for example,
accused Rayson of portraying Eggs as a moustache-twirling
Dickensian stereotype. This is nonsense.
Two Brothers is not exaggerated or distorted but a genuine
and, at times, chilling examination of the callous political psychology
of those responsible for Canberras asylum seeker policies.
In fact, Eggs Benedict and his personal secretary, Jaime Savage
(Caroline Brazier), are accurately rendered fictional microcosms
of the sort of individuals capable of pursuing these policies.
The response of Prime Minister Howard and then Immigration
Minister Phillip Ruddock (now attorney-general) to news of the
SIEV X tragedy in 2001 was as bone chilling as any aspect of Eggs
Benedicts behaviour.
Ruddock told the media that the disaster may have an
upside ... In the sense that some people may see the dangers inherent
in it, while Howard cynically obfuscated, falsely claiming
that Australian personnel had no knowledge of the vessels
existence.
Leading members of the so-called oppositionthe Australian
Labor Party, Greens and Democratsdid not challenge these
claims at the time. This was despite the fact that Operation Relex,
the military operation initiated by the Howard government to prevent
refugee boats landing in Australia, had precise intelligence of
SIEV Xs location and its overcrowded and unseaworthy state.
Rayson, moreover, is acutely aware that any serious artist,
no matter how worthy the issues they decide to explore,
has the responsibility to candidly tell their story in a dramatically
valid way. Part of her research for Two Brothers involved
lengthy interviews with members of the Melbourne Club. This provided
her with valuable background which is clearly apparent in much
of the plays dialogue.
Far from overplaying the cold-blooded disdain with which the
353 victims on the SIEV X have been treated by the whole spectrum
of official politics, Rayson and the actors capture it very well.
Eggs and his secretary Jaime Savage are typical of those who
calmly incarcerate hundreds of refugees in outback or offshore
detention centres while at the same time justifying the illegal
US-led invasion of Iraq with a tissue of lies. Brazier, in particular,
evinces the cold, professional, almost casual brutality that necessarily
prevails when governments make regular decisions that destroy
lives and livelihoods.
McDonalds performance is a tour de force, effortlessly
recreating Eggs sinister charm and switching between the
politicians unvarnished malice and his affable public face.
When Eggs says, They ask me how people like me sleep at
night. We sleep very well, one is reminded of Shakespeares
Richard III. Its not difficult to imagine Eggs or
Savage repeating Richards terrifying comment: Why,
I can smile. And murder while I smile.
Two Brothers also demonstrates a perceptive understanding
that Eggs, Savage and their ilk are acutely conscious of the real
nature of their policies and spend much of their time desperately
working to cover-up or spin their actions. Raysons
dramatisation of this process is artful and compelling.
When Savage learns that Al Ayad may have seen the RAN vessel
that abandoned the drowning asylum seekers, she immediately tries
to smear him as an Al Qaeda supporter. Far from being a parody,
this is an effective reminder that, for the last three and a half
years, every attack on democratic rights has been justified on
the basis of the war on terror.
In an exchange between Savage and Al Ayad, Rayson reproduces
the vicious and hypocritical logic employed by government ministers
to poison public perception of asylum seekers.
Ayad points to the human cost of Canberras abolition
of family reunion rights. You cant cut a man off from
his family, he says. He will go crazy.
Savages response is icy and politically calculated. Well,
we certainly dont want crazy people coming here, she
retorts, especially from the Middle East.
Some limitations
The strongest scenes in Act II are the confrontations between
Tom and Eggs. Whatever we have learned about their personality
conflicts, sibling rivalry and political altercations in the first
act, become unbridgeable differences as the truth of events begins
to emerge. Likewise Fiona, Eggs wife, and Lachlan, his son,
react with disgust and outrage when they learn about the terrible
human impact of border protection and the war
on terror.
When Eggs attempts to buy his brother Toms silence with
an international humanitarian post (Do good on the world
stage. Leave Australia to me), Tom bluntly rejects it and
decides to tell the media about the governments role in
the refugee deaths. The journalists respond with characteristic
disinterest.
The weak points of Two Brothers also become apparent
in Act II, as Rayson, who perhaps has attempted to cover too much,
strains to bring together all the political and emotional issues
presented during the first half of the play. The playwright falls
back on various local references and a few jokes, which grate,
and are unlikely to translate to audiences outside the state of
Victoria, let alone internationally.
In addition, Raysons portrayal of Fiona Benedict does
not jell.
Fiona is shocked by her husbands directives to the navy
to not pick up the drowning refugees and at one point, after a
discussion with Ange, Toms wife, considers leaving Eggs.
Notwithstanding Craigs admirable performance, this is less
than convincing. Fionas initial decision to marry an ambitious
Liberal Party minister and the events that drive developments
in the play cannot be the only heinous policies shes had
to justify to herself.
Being the wife of an openly right-wing bourgeois politician
is clearly a profession in itself and one that carries the promise
of great rewards. While not impossible, it is doubtful that someone
in her position would jeopardise all that after having one heart-to-heart
chat with someone she considers a social inferior and who also
happens to be the wife of an outspoken political opponent.
Another more serious weakness is Raysons omission of
any real references to the bi-partisan role played by the ALP.
In her April 19 comment in the Age, Rayson attempted
to rebut accusations that Two Brothers was anti-Liberal
Party propaganda declaring: The greatest political
indictment in the play is surely directed against the Labor Party
... a play about one of the defining issues of our times and the
Labor Party is not present. What does that say?
But Tom Benedict appears to be a card-carrying member of the
organisation, or at least attends its conferences.
While Rayson may have no political confusions about the ALP,
her claim that it is not present in the defining
issues of our times is not true and leaves the door open
for those who maintain lingering conceptions that it represents
some kind of opposition to the government or may sometime in the
future.
Rather than the ALP being absent, the party laid
the legal foundations for the Howard governments policies.
Mandatory detention of refugees was initiated by the Hawke-Keating
government in 1991 and, when the High Court deemed it unconstitutional,
rushed legislation through parliament to entrench it into law.
Under Labor, the Port Hedland detention centre was constructed
precisely because the remote location would prevent asylum seekers
access to lawyers and journalists.
During the 2001 elections Labor leader Kim Beazley attempted
to present his party as tougher on border protection
than Howard and in 2002, when it looked like the governments
role in the SIEV X tragedy might be fully revealed, Labor voted
to shut down the Senate inquiry into the issue.
Without excusing this omission, Rayson, however, is not alone.
In fact, almost all the plays and documentaries produced about
Australian refugee policies have been characterised by their failure
to demonstrate, even in limited form, Labors role in these
events, reflecting unresolved illusions in the Labor Party. Future
dramatisations and documentaries on this issue do need to address
this vital question.
Notwithstanding this weakness Two Brothers, is a valuable
and courageous contribution to a broader political discussion.
One hopes that Rayson, who is a genuinely creative writer, will
begin to examine some of the deeper international and historical
driving forces behind the right-wing shift in the political and
cultural climate to which she is responding and resisting.
Rayson has previously voiced her concerns about those who accommodate
to this climate, and the responsibility of serious dramatists
and writers.
As she explained to Artbeat in April 2001: I think
theatre is potentially the most subversive of all the art forms.
I say potentially because the theatre scene is full
of earnest young men in black t-shirts who talk about being subversive,
but what they mean is aesthetically subversive: subverting
the form, rather than politically subversive. They want
to assault the senses rather than change the world. I have felt
for a long time that, unless theatre addresses the public agenda,
it will die. What we need is a content-led recovery.
This approach is entirely commendable and constitutes the essential
strength of Two Brothers, a work that deserves the widest
audience.
See Also:
Media witch-hunts new Australian play
and Hannie Rayson, its author
[4 May 2005]
A sincere and evocative
protest
Letters to Ali, directed by Clara Law
[11 October 2004]
Love and anti-refugee
racism in rural Australia
Marking Time directed by Cherie Nolan, written by John
Doyle
[21 November 2003]
An interview with Tom
Zubrycki, director of Molly & Mobarak
[22 September 2003]
Life after George
Insights into the faded hopes of the 60s generation
[23 October 2000]
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