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Hilda, a first play written by a French-Senegalese
novelist, Marie Ndiaye, is a taut one act about modern day slavery in which a wealthy
woman becomes obsessed with the new nanny she employs. In the spirit of both Pinter and
the filmmaker David Lynch, there is a creepy, unlikely essence to this play, but with
absurdity, ideas of control and class are brought into greater relief. Its always a
little too unsettlingly close to possibility to discount the conflicts presented.
Ndiaye has created a scenario where the subject of the play, the young
maid Hilda, is never seen. The main actor is the mistress of the house, Mrs. Lemarchand
(Ellen Karas), who develops a relationship with Hilda's husband, first to glean more
information about her new employee, then to exert her increasingly irrational power over
both Hilda and him. In the tautly controlled, developing hysteria in Karas' performance,
anything seems possible. Marco Barricelli, as Frank, the husband, has few actual lines,
but simmers with hatred from the beginning.
The boiling point which is inevitably achieved is perhaps the most
skillfully achieved part of the play. The fact that Mrs. Lemarchands control over
Frank is never diminished, even in his physical presence and threat, is exceedingly well
done. Money talks.
Unsettling, French in nature, but just as American in its discomfort
with the ramifications of class, power and control, Hilda works. Ndiaye is a
theatrical voice to be watched. Hilda is stripped-down but full of ideas. It is
chilling and absurd, but engrossing. The production in San Francisco by the American
Conservatory Theatre, at their intimate Zeum venue, was directed by Artistic Director
Carey Perloff and is part of ACTs program for the development of new writers and
writing. This production is the English-language premiere of the play, which premiered in
2002 at Theatre de lAtelier, in Paris.