The big job of creating small people

IT’S A PRETTY big tale to stage. There’s a land of giants, a land of tiny people and a land of horses

IT'S A PRETTY big tale to stage. There's a land of giants, a land of tiny people and a land of horses. There are royal processions and sea battles. "Every scene is asking the audience to imagine the impossible and tell the story of the fantastical," says Alice Coghlan, who has adapted and directed the production of Gulliver's Travelswhich is currently on stage at Smock Alley Theatre in Dublin.

It’s a fast-moving show, with 38 scenes packed into 90 minutes as five actors and more than twice as many backstage designers and manipulators use a mixture of puppeteering, physical theatre and perspective trickery to recreate Jonathan Swift’s classic satire. “We’ve left out the floating island,” Coghlan admits. “But only because we’re trying to keep the running time to a length where children will still be paying attention.”

Not that there isn’t plenty to catch the eye. “In the book the giants are as tall as churches – 60 feet tall,” she says. “I have an image of Liberty Hall in my mind as I say that. It’s such a relief when we do the scenes with Gulliver’s family; all the people are the same height, and there are no talking animals or whatever else. Because we can’t put 3D glasses on the audience like they do at the cinema.”

The project came about through Coghlan's company, Wonderland, being in residence at Mermaid Arts Centre in Bray, Co Wicklow. "They wanted a big family show," she explains. "I had this idea that Gulliver's Travelswas relevant to the contemporary situation in Ireland. Then, basically, they said 'do it'. We did three development weeks over the course of 2010, and it became clear that it was definitely a puppet show." But they decided to use actors as well, partly to help the audience visualise the differences of scale in the story, partly because actors can convey a great deal more than puppets in terms of emotions, facial expressions and so forth.

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Where do you startwhen you are adapting an early 18th-century text for the stage? Coghlan has already adapted Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Grayfor Wonderland, using about 20 per cent of the book as dramatic text. Wilde, however, is generous with his dialogue. Swift isn't. "I would never presume to be a better writer than Jonathan Swift," she says. "But we had to invent the dialogue because there's hardly any of it in Gulliver's Travels. So I do feel, to some extent, that I have written a play. I wanted to preserve the flavour of Swift's language – but for a family audience, we can't use too many big words or arcane expressions, or the children would be left behind."

Swift’s satire, however, is bang up to date. “So much of what he says is about the human condition - about human frailty and weakness – that you feel like he’s writing for now,” says Coghlan. She isn’t the first to spot this. The vicious civil war in Lilliput between the Big-endians and the Little-endians, over whether a boiled egg should be opened at one end or the other, has given rise to a feature in computer software known as “endian-ness”. For Swift, says Coghlan, the boiled egg business was a question of religious belief versus fundamentalism.

“The Lilliputians were really talking about God being at the centre of rule and kingliness. But all their talk about ‘God is on our side’ - as I was writing that, I could just hear the voices of Blair and Bush and all that stuff in my head, so it became incredibly contemporary for me. Swift was very anti-war, and I think a modern audience can really connect with that.”

Reducing politicians to the size of six-inch dolls is also, she says, a fruitful satiric strategy. “To see human pomposity reduced to that level, and how endlessly pathetic the Lilliputians are. They love long words and big phrases – which is, again, very like modern politicians – and long, long titles. The king is introduced with about 18 of the most florid adjectives before you finally say his name. So a lot of it does remind me of modern politics. It’s just kind of sad that Swift said all he had to say in the 1720s, and nothing has really changed in the meantime.”

Coghlan invited three different stage designers to work on the “worlds” in the piece. Thus Lilliput has a bright, playing-card sort of look while Brobdingnag, the land of giants, is styled like something from Nordic mythology. “It’s like making three different shows and then pushing them into one,” she says. How, then, do they ensure that the whole thing hangs together? “We’ve picked up on something that’s almost comic in the book, which is that Gulliver keeps getting shipwrecked in various forms. He escapes from Lilliput; he’s rescued; then he gets left behind on a beach. The sea is the link.

"We also laugh at that with the audience, because it's getting so ridiculous. Like, he's rescued by a boat called The Swift. This guy's just a bit too lucky. Although I did hear once there was somebody who was rescued from both the Lusitaniaand the Titanic– so it can happen."

Wonderland is going to have a busy year in 2011. Gulliver's Travelswill be at Smock Alley until the end of the month, and dates are already planned at the Riverbank Arts Centre in Newbridge, Co Kildare and the Town Hall Theatre, Galway in March. The Picture of Dorian Graywill be back at Bewley's Cafe Theatre for a third stint in April, and next week the company's production of Goldoni's comedy La Locandierareturns to the Campo di Fiori restaurant in Bray. "That's by popular demand, which is fantastic," says Coghlan. "It will be our third time going around Wicklow. That's all to do with our residency, that we take our work around the county. Our dinner shows can go anywhere there's a restaurant or a hotel. The hope is that that will connect us to audiences and to other shows."

Meanwhile, Gulliver's Travelsis going with a bang. Or, as Coghlan puts it, "plenty of bangs – like the movies. Children think much more pictorially, so I felt there had to be something very clearly happening visually all the time, as well as what the text was doing. Our puppets do things that people can't. They fly up into the air, or do slightly crazy spirals.

“I saw a programme about Roald Dahl while we were rehearsing, and he said that to keep children interested you need two events a page. I think he was about right.”


Wonderland's Gulliver's Travelsis at Smock Alley until January 22

Arminta Wallace

Arminta Wallace

Arminta Wallace is a former Irish Times journalist