| A Review of: One Good Marriage by Lia Marie TaliaSean Reycraft is a Canadian playwright who examines the contours
of contemporary marriage. One Good Marriage begins with tragedy and
explores the fallout that this brings to a marriage, wrenching a
couple out of the comfort of a stable union into a state of confusion
and uncertainty. Through meeting these challenges, the writer
suggests, a couple can create a stronger bond that defies conventional
expectations.
One Good Marriage is narrated by two characters, Stewart, a high-school
librarian, and his wife, Steph, a high school English teacher. This
play also withholds a secret from its audience, with the actors
slowly revealing the incident that forever changed Stewart and
Steph's marriage. The play begins with their first anniversary, yet
the celebratory tone is undermined from the start by a rumpled
banner with only "versary" visible, and the obvious
vigilance with which the couple survey their surroundings. Steph's
first words, "Everybody died," irritate Stewart, who tries
to reassure the audience that things will turn out all right. As
the characters take turns telling the story, we begin to realize
that they are attempting to come to terms with an incident that
still torments them. At the end of the play, the audience becomes
part of this dramatic event, when they are literally left in the
dark, commanded to close their eyes as the actors disappear into a
blackout that leaves the audience prone to the same fears that haunt
the protagonists. The darkness underscores not only the play's
tragic revelation, but also the limitations of our understanding
and the necessity of maintaining faith in the face of heartbreaking
circumstances. For Stewart and Steph do survive the sorrow that
befell them, and by listening, the audience has helped them to do
so.
By exploring intimacy through both staging and theme, this play
reveals the obstacles to communication and the delicate process of
maintaining individual identity in relation to a shared identity
within a marriage. To use feminist theorist Judith Butler's vocabulary,
the performative aspect of a pair's relationship, the way two
individuals act-out their identity as a couple, demonstrates the
effort that building and maintaining a marriage, or any close
relationship, requires. It also highlights for the audience the
difficulty of this arrangement and the fact that it requires of two
individuals to go beyond received notions of marriage to create a
more sustaining union. Ultimately, the play asserts that to be
troubled' can lead to a more profound understanding of one's spouse
and a greater appreciation for the less conventional aspects of
intimacy and love.
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