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Theatre

Review: Salome

Yael Ferber's new play Salome is unforgettable, but it's not theatre, says John Nathan.

May 22, 2017 12:04
A scene fromSalom+® a new play by Ya+½l Farber, centre  Isabella Nefar, Olwen Fouere image by Johan Persson
1 min read

If I had to identify just a single hallmark of theatre created by the writer/director Yael Farber, it is that her productions are unforgettable. They include the searing Strindberg-inspired Mies Julie; a harrowing response to the notorious Delhi bus rape and murder, and a terrifying revisiting of Arthur Miller’s The Crucible.

All invoke the power of women. And so, too, does this attempt to rewrite the story and reputation of Salome. Here Herod’s seductress daughter is redrawn as a revolutionary challenger of Pontius Pilate’s authority.

Farber has carved a career from pushing the rules of conventional theatre and here she tears up the entire book. This time the result evokes a sense of antiquity that is more convincing than any I have ever seen on stage.

Designer Susan Hilferty shapes the air with shafts of light and great swathes of linen. A curtain of sand falls like some great biblical act of God and serenading the entire uninterrupted one hour and forty five minutes are two women (the Israeli singer-songwriter Yasmina Levy and the Syrian singer Lubana al Quntar) whose voices are as redolent of ritual as the sound of a shofar.