Friday 22 October 1999

Nocturne for Lovers , Oct 22-30 1999


by Bruno Villien adapted by Gavin Lambert
 Fairfax Studio until 22, 24, 26, 27, 28, 30 October, 1999
Reviewer: Kate Herbert



The stars of Leslie Caron's performance, Nocturne for Lovers, are Frederic Chopin's music and George Sand's passions although "lovers" is a misnomer for the prolonged and mostly non-sexual relationship between these two artists.

Sand, born Aurore Dupin in Paris in 1804, was a mother to the tubercular Chopin during their volatile relationship from 1838 to 1847. Even when he lived at her home in Nohant, Chopin referred to her as his "hostess". Now, there's a euphemism!

This performance is one of two Melbourne Festival vehicles for screen star, Caron. From Sand's correspondence, Bruno Villien adapted Nocturne into a play called Un Amour qui attend La Mort which is tastefully translated into English by Gavin Lambert.

The monologue, set during the period of her acquaintance with Chopin, begins with Caron in Sand's characteristic trousers with cigar and mannish gestures. She changes into more feminine attire to reflect Sand's acquiescence to Chopin's demands.

The great irony is that Sand was a radical feminist before the term was coined. She wrote and spoke publicly for the cause of the workers and believed women to be different but equal to men. She left her husband, had affairs with famous men including Delacroix and Flaubert, educated her children and wrote novels at night under the pseudonym of George Sand.

Why would such a woman choose a "narrow-minded, domineering" and childish artist as a lover? Anyone with the answer to this question would immediately reduce all gender argument to dust.


Accompanying Caron is piano virtuoso, David Abramovitz, who speaks no words but communicates volumes through exceptional musical skill playing 16 Chopin works.

Roger Hodgman deftly directs the relationship between the two characters, allowing Abramovitz's regal presence, simple poses and intense gaze to tell us all as Caron perches on a stool or sits quietly at her desk; sometimes it is a little too static.

Caron's performance uses the mimetic gestures of classical ballet that are melodramatic rather than dramatic. This, unfortunately, creates an appearance of artificiality in the genuine passions of Sand.

Sand was a human dynamo who believed she could not live without love but realised she could not find it in one man. What kind of life could she have in the late 20th century?

by Kate Herbert

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