Fringe Festival Review: FracturReview by Kimberley Crayton-Brown
Fractur
Urban Vineyard theatre cooperative
Bats Theatre
13–16 Feb, 8pm
book@bats.co.nz, 802 4175
CONTAINS SPOILERS
Image from Fringe website
The show begins with creator and director Vanja Draganic addressing the audience, explaining her reasons for wanting to
recreate the 1971 Stanford Prison Experiment.
“My father was shot by a neighbour,” she says, “they called it ethnic cleansing.”
She wanted to explore what caused the ‘fracturs’ between people and cultures, and Fractur is the result.
Described as documentary theatre, the audience is led to believe what they are witnessing is based on actual events.
Throughout the play the actors acknowledge they are part of an experiment, and the director herself appears from time to
time to check their progress.
The audience is told eight actors volunteered to spend six days locked in a hall in the Waikato, divided into prisoners
and guards. What happened over those days was filmed, edited, and then turned into a script.
Over an hour the audience observe relationships breaking down between actors who were previously friends; prisoners who
turn on each other, and guards whose sudden power over others often becomes violent.
The basic lighting and set help create an image of a hall or “prison”, with actors breaking the fourth wall between
scenes to explain to the audience their reasons for participating in the experiment, or to justify their behaviour.
There are some intense moments in this play, and the small size of the Bats theatre means the audience are often left
feeling slightly uncomfortable.
This tension builds until the final, explosive scene of the play where each character turns on another, chairs are
thrown, and the director bursts onto the stage.
One character runs into the audience, screaming for their help, then the actors rush backstage and the show abruptly
ends.
There were times during this play where the idea of it being based on real events added to its effect. It was hard to
believe a human being could treat another this way, that the people in front of you had acted this way, and this is what
made the action on stage so shocking.
And even though it turns out the entire play is fiction and Vanja Draganic is only a character (Fractur was actually written and directed by David Foote), it succeeds in leaving you questioning human nature, and wondering
what it is about power that makes people act the way they do and create such ‘fracturs’.
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