Powerhouse performances in 'Not About Eve'
So the point is not if 'Not About Eve' is a good play; it is how good the performance was on that particular day at the Sir Philip Sherlock Centre for the Creative Arts, University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona campus. And it was very good, Carol Lawes (Agatha Rochester (Mama), Nadean Rawlins (Katherine Shields) and Lisa Williams (Kimberly Shields) working out three generations of differences on a rooftop garden in St Andrew.
For the record, 'Not About Eve' is about one day in two acts, during which a high-strung Katherine finally confronts her mother Agatha about the favourable treatment meted out to her brothers, at the expense of Katherine's education. In turn, Katherine's daughter Kimberly throws the rumoured treatment of her dead father into the family's public space, Mama also criticising her daughter for planning a party on the anniversary of the man's death.
Kimberley's lesbianism
In the mix is Kimberley's lesbianism, finally exposed to a horrified Mama, and Katherine leaving home in St Elizabeth with a man when she was a youngster. So although there are no men in the cast of the Brian Heap-directed play, they are not peripheral to the story.
'Not About Eve' ends with Kimberly leaving home and Mama staying, after raising the possibility of going to stay with one of her sons in the US, the lights fading on grandmother and granddaughter bonding over cups of tea, no words necessary.
It is the end of a production in which the trio's powerful performances, mostly so by Lawes with humour, anger, outrage and shock registered in good measure, kept the audience in the moment of the family's roller-coaster day of discovery.
- Mel Cooke




