Venue Cymru, Llandudno July 30th – Aug 4th 2024 and touring
(5 / 5)Irene Sankoff and David Hein
Smith & Brant Theatricals, Red Hanger, Gavin Kalin Productions, Tulchin Bartner Productions, Echo Lake Entertainment, Square Peg, Stephen and Paula Reynolds, Fiery Dragons, Judith Ann Abrams/Peter May, Nancy Gibbs, Curve Leicester
Come from away documents a remarkable experience. As the tragedy of 9/11 unfolded and American airspace was closed, many planes had to make unscheduled landings in far flung places. 38 of them landed at Gander airport, Newfoundland.
With a population of about 9000, the local community found themselves hosting 7000 unexpected incomers with a range of different languages, customs, medical and dietary needs. There were also 19 animals including a pregnant bonobo ape. This was a refugee scenario where the hosts were entirely unprepared. The days that followed demonstrated the best in human qualities. Food was drummed up, beds found, activities were organised such that lasting friendships were formed that have been sustained to this day.
Would the stage be the best place to retell these events or would a film be better? On the evidence of this performance, the energy and immediacy of the stage is a great platform and the cast exploited this story in excellent fashion. It was a prime example of ensemble theatre, a close knit team working together in a fast moving, intense drama. Actors do an outstanding job as they switch roles from hosts to incomers seamlessly and retell these events and their aftermath. There is a great backing group playing a range of Irish-Canadian melodies to enhance the action.
The individual stories invoke a range of emotions when you hear them. Diane and Nick were on the same plane, met and the following year got married. Hannah was worried for her son, a firefighter in Brooklyn yet was comforted by Beulah who also had a firefighting son. It is in the minutiae that the poignant moments rest. A moment when a Christian song, a Muslim chant and a Jewish incantation are heard as people pray, emphasising the importance of faith in coming to terms with life experience. A scene where an older gentleman reveals to a Jewish rabbi that he had a hidden Jewish background dating from his early life in Poland. Two people communicating through the use of Bible references to encourage each other when they had no shared language.
The welcoming nature of this Canadian-Irish community is graphically shown in the ceilidh held one night. It saw some visitors inducted as honorary Newfoundlanders through ‘screeching in’, drinking a shot of Irish whiskey and kissing a fish, a custom used to welcome new cast members to the show. This to me is an enduring legacy of a must-see show, the power of community. Had this town not been as tight nit and warm in its embrace, the experience of the incomers might have been quite different. As it is, they felt an immense debt of gratitude but in attempting to express this, received a standard response, ‘It was nothing, anyone else would have done the same.’ It was not nothing, it was remarkable. This makes the show a privilege to watch.