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two actors on stage, one is a man playing Uncle Vanya, the other is a woman laughing
Opinion_

New adaptation of Uncle Vanya reminds us Chekhov's play is both timeless and timely

5 August 2024
An exceptional production of Uncle Vanya captures Chekhov鈥檚 essence
Dr Alexander Howard, Senior Lecturer in English and Writing, reviews Australian playwright Joanna Murray-Smith's new adaptation of Uncle Vanya at Ensemble Theatre.

Virginia Woolf聽聽that, of all of the great writers, the British novelist Jane Austen 鈥渋s the most difficult to catch in the act of greatness鈥.

To my mind, the groundbreaking Russian playwright Anton Chekhov gives Austen a close run for her money. He is also, as one tends to find when seeing his work performed live, very hard to get right.

This difficulty stems from the subtlety and nuance of Chekhov鈥檚 writing, which, on the surface, appears to trade exclusively in the trivialities and minutiae of everyday existence.

Nothing, however, could be further from the truth.

Chekhov鈥檚 genius lies precisely in his ability to achieve a great deal with seemingly very little. He conveys emotional depth and intellectual profundity through subtle, almost imperceptible, shifts in tone and characterisation, all while eschewing conventional dramatic action.

With that in mind, it is heartening to be able to report the Ensemble Theatre鈥檚 exceptional and engaging production of Uncle Vanya successfully captures the essence of Chekhov鈥檚 work.

A storied history

a black and white photo from 1882, two brothers in a drawing room

Anton Chekhov, left, with his brother Nikolay in 1882.聽

The history of Uncle Vanya, which was written in 1897 and first staged in 1899, is complex. Born on January 29 1860, Chekhov grew up in Taganrog, a port city in Southern Russia. He started writing in school and finished a full-length play by the age of 17.

In 1879, after moving to Moscow to study medicine, Chekhov supported his family by writing humorous sketches and stories for various journals. This work provided him with a crucial source of income.

At the same time, he continued to hone his skills as a dramatist. In 1888, he began work on what would become his third play, The Wood Demon.

Written in collaboration with his friend and publisher, Alexi Survorin, Chekhov finished the script in October 1889. The play premiered at the Abramov Theatre in Moscow on December 27 1889. It was a resounding flop. The reviews were overwhelmingly negative and the production ground to a halt after only three performances.

a man sitting at a writing table

Anton Chekhov in 1889.聽

Bruised but undeterred, Chekhov kept chiselling away at the play. Nearly a decade in the making, the eventual result was Uncle Vanya, which differs drastically from The Wood Demon in terms of running time, formal structure and tonal affect. While The Wood Demon unfolds across multiple venues, Uncle Vanya, a work about unrequited love and thwarted ambition, is set in a single location.

This change in setting afforded Chekhov the opportunity to intensify his focus on the internal conflicts and interpersonal dynamics of his cast of characters. They represent, as the cultural theorist聽, 鈥渁 generation whose whole energy is consumed in the very process of becoming conscious of their own inadequacy and impotence鈥.

Conflicts and comedy

The plot of the tragicomic play centres on a dilapidated rural estate, where the eponymous Vanya and his niece Sonya toil to maintain the property for the benefit of Vanya鈥檚 brother-in-law, Professor Serebryakov, whose unexpected visit with his young wife, Yelena, disrupts the daily routine of the disgruntled household.

Tensions mount, passions flare and tempers threaten to boil over.

a group of actors on a stage getting ready to sit down at a dinner table

The plot of the tragicomic play centres on a dilapidated rural estate. Actor Yalin Ozucelik as Uncle Vanya (centre). Photo: Prudence Upton/Ensemble Theatre

Adapted by the award-winning Australian playwright Joanna Murray-Smith and directed by Mark Kilmurry, the Ensemble Theatre鈥檚 production excels in rendering these escalating conflicts, leavened by moments of genuine comedy.

This is no mean feat. In many interpretations of Chekhov,聽, 鈥渢he comedy is missing because it just doesn鈥檛 translate to now鈥.

By the same token, Murray-Smith expresses doubts about pandering to contemporary tastes when it comes to theatrical adaptation:

In a good production of a Chekhov, you really don鈥檛 need to make any changes if you don鈥檛 want to: you can present it in the world at the end of the 19th century [鈥 I鈥檓 not doing very well at selling my own job here, but a lot of the time I think the modernising is completely unnecessary.

Happily, this production 鈥 which also makes excellent use of the Ensemble Theatre鈥檚 intimate theatrical setting 鈥 proves Murray-Smith correct.

The performances are all outstanding. Abbey Morgan gives us a preternaturally stoical Sonya. Chantelle Jamieson鈥檚 portrayal of Yelena blends passion and irony. Deftly shifting between satire and sincerity, the cast evokes both laughter and real sympathy from the audience.

a female actor is seated at a table

Abbey Morgan gives us a preternaturally stoical Sonya. Photo: Prudence Upton/Ensemble Theatre

When handled with due care and proper attention, as it is here, Chekhov鈥檚 play is simultaneously timeless and timely.

It addresses themes of ecological degradation, intergenerational strife and societal upheaval 鈥 just as relevant today as it was in 1899.

Uncle Vanya is at Ensemble Theatre, Sydney, until August 31, 2024.


Dr Alexander Howard聽is senior lecturer in English. He specialises in聽modernist, postmodernist, and contemporary forms of literature and film. This story was first published in .

Hero photo:聽Chantelle Jamieson and YalinOzucelik in Uncle Vanya (Credit Prudence Upton/Ensemble Theatre)

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