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Traveller
Without Luggage
Thorndike Theatre, Leatherhead, Surrey, 1972
Role: Gaston
Traveller Without Luggage is an intense
and bittersweet drama of family, identity and redemption. It was
written in 1936 by Jean Anouilh, a highly reputed French
playwright.
Jeremy's production took place in
the
Thorndike Theatre, in Surrey. The newly reconstructed theater
had opened in 1969 amid much fanfare and was truly innovative in
its time.
Here is a plot synopsis of Anouilh's
play (Le voyageur Sans Bagage):
A man is found in 1918 on a railway siding,
having come off a train loaded with returning prisoners of war. He
has amnesia, and nothing is known about him. He is given the name
Gaston.
Gaston spends more than a dozen years in a mental institution,
largely ignored. Despite his surroundings, he is kind, sane and
down-to-earth.
This peace is shattered when a new psychiatrist comes along and
decides to find out who Gaston really is. Another reason to
determine his identity lies in the fact that several families have
come forward to claim Gaston as their own, mainly because he
receives a large disability allowance.
He is brought to one family who believes he is actually Jacques,
the son they thought lost in the war. Their remembrances of
Jacques, however, are disturbing to gentle Gaston. They tell of an
arrogant, aristocratic bully who crippled his best friend, killed
animals and slept with his brother's wife.
He is horrified at this image of himself and denies that he was
this monster. The sister-in-law convinces him that he is Jacques by
referring to a scar on the back of his shoulder.
Even with this evidence, Gaston/Jacques escapes this identity. He
deals with another family, and even though he knows he is Jacques,
he pretends to be someone else. He thus releases the fetters of his
past and emerges from his existential crisis.
Wikipedia page about Jean Anouilh
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