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The Taxidermist's Daughter

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Rosin McBrinn’s direction keeps the action taut, but there’s no getting away from the fact that there’s a tad too much exposition and not enough dramatic meat linking the disparate elements of the plot for the uniformly excellent actors to chew on. Which is why when Connie fully regains her memory, during a macabre vignette featuring four men in penguin suits and bird masks enacting an arcane ritual, it feels like overwrought padding. I enjoyed this book but even after reading it twice I still don’t know when how or why Cassie could have had reparation, what could they have said, and when. A dark but thrilling play about country superstition, power dynamics and artistry, adapted by Kate Mosse from her Gothic novel, and rightly debuting in the Sussex county where the action takes place. Mosse is an engaging storyteller, deftly dealing with the intricacies of her involving, gruesome plot”

At the core of it,” says director Róisín McBrinn, “is a young woman who has been separated from the justice that she deserves – which, unfortunately, is still a very common theme. And a woman who is believed less than the men around her, were she to have had the opportunity even to be heard. Which, again, is a very modern theme: women searching for their place, women defending their space, issues of class. It’s all very much alive. And the kind of cohesive power of a community to suppress secrets, unfortunately, is not something that’s gone away. All of those themes are highly contemporary, but also completely coherent to the period.” Although the book is set in 1912, only two years before the outbreak of the Great War, the atmosphere in remote Fishbourne seems almost Victorian, perfect for Mosse’s theme of taxidermy (which involves plenty of gory disembowelling) and dark, homicidal secrets. But although this wonderful novel ends on a note of hope, the reader is all too aware that only a couple of years in the future, the world will be plunged into darkness.Years ago, when we first began to visit Cornwall our kids were fascinated by the Victorian museum of stuffed animals, then housed at Jamaica Inn on Bodmin Moor. So, all the ingredients are there to make this play scintillating and transportive, but there’s a sense that it wants to have its cake and eat it by yoking together a gothic mystery and revenge thriller. Still, a pleasant night at the theatre. An interconnected dual mystery is at the core of the novel, whose heroine, Constantia Gifford, practises her father’s trade, for with the failure of his once-thriving business, Gifford’s World Famous House of Avian Curiosities, the taxidermist has sunk into drunken inertia. Connie is bright, beautiful and determined. She is a victim of traumatic memory loss and the plot involves her mind’s retrieval of obscene happenings 10 years previously. The closer we come to understanding the events and characters of the present, the more of her dark past is revealed, and vice versa. Clues carefully placed throughout neatly come together in a climax that has all the ingredients of a typical gothic thriller – a storm and a flood, a fallen woman and the reveal of a gruesome crime.

It took some help from Mosse’s actor son, Felix, to excavate the play from the novel. “As a novelist, I’m used to being responsible for the whole world. He would often say, ‘The actor will play that, Mum.’ On the stage, you have flesh and blood, so don’t tell the actor how to act.” The big structural decision was to turn the story from a gothic mystery – which only unravels towards the end, as Connie’s memories return – to a revenge drama involving, from the outset, a second woman, Cassie, who is a shadow presence for most of the novel.And with the discovery on the marshes of the washed-up body of a woman in a cobalt hooded coat, strangled with taxidermist’s wire, Connie becomes determined to unearth the terrors of her past. What happens instead is a murder. A few days later the body of a young woman is found floating in a stream beside the house of our heroine, 22 year old Connie Gifford. The woman has been garrotted with a taxidermist’s wire. Connie suspects her alcoholic father of the crime; he is indeed the local taxidermist, once wealthy owner of a fabled museum, now a failed drunk since te vogue for stuffed birds fell out of fashion. The one thing that elevates the play is Paul Wills’s design, a feast for the eyes making intelligent use of every inch of the capacious stage, and working in brilliant tandem with Prema Mehta’s lighting and Sinéad Diskin’s sound. Together, they impressively evoke the rain-lashed marshlands, storm waves crashing into sea walls, the town square, the church, various other interiors, Connie’s fragments of memory and the Giffords’ cabinets of curiosities. And all with an economy of transition from scene to scene. Opinion | Don't sneer at celebrities on the West End. They're saving theatre 27 October, 2023 Pulitzer winner Lynn Nottage's new drama Clyde's fails to convince 25 October, 2023 Philip Guston at the Tate Modern is an outstanding exhibition of crisis, violence and injustice 21 October, 2023

Kate Mosse has developed her own attachment to these Victorian curiosities into a spectacularly spooky gothic tale in her novel. Set ‘on the edge of the drowned marshes’ of a small Sussex village in 1912, the book opens with a bizarre midnight ceremony held by villagers every year. They gather outside the old church one the Eve of St Mark, when they believe that the ghosts of those destined to die in the coming year will materialise as the church bell tolls. This play is not for the squeamish because detailed descriptions of the process of taxidermy abound. Taxidermy, specifically of the avian and – queasily – human varieties, is the nifty storytelling device on which Mosse swathes the skin of her story and keeps the plot zipping along. Gripping, moving and intricately written, The Taxidermist’s Daughter will surely delight [Mosse’s] legions of fans. It’s perfectly paced and impossible to put down”Mosse’s main trade is impressive novels which may make her dialogue sometimes baldly explanatory – “I had an accident when I was a child. I don’t always remember” – in the way of a narrator’s usually candid relationship with the reader, rather than more ambiguous theatre speech, leaving actors space to grace-notes with voice and face. More subtext is generally what the piece needs: the story is always plotty and enjoyable but metaphors suggested by the dominant morbid imagery might have been pushed further in the script.

It starts with a spurt of high theatricality: smoke and spotlights and singing and wildlife, all amid a deluge of rain in a Sussex churchyard. And if this atmospheric opening of Kate Mosse’s adaptation of her gothic suspense novel from 2014 teeters on the edge of absurdity, it holds its balance and doesn’t topple over. It’s the same year that the suffragettes started using militant tactics but curiously, given the play’s message of female empowerment, that newsworthiness doesn’t seem to have penetrated the sleepy facade of this village, a hotbed of sordid secrets in this story. The novel in question is The Taxidermist’s Daughter, which is set around Mosse’s home near Chichester in the unusually stormy year of 1912. Sea water surges through the marshes and carrion birds gather ominously above the local church as long-submerged evils bubble to the surface, confronting the eponymous heroine Connie Gifford with memories she lost years earlier in a mysterious childhood accident. The Titanic had just sunk but nobody was talking about thatAs Connie bemoans, “only men with their delicate little hands” are allowed to become taxidermists, not women. She must do her work in secret – firstly, because she’s not a man, but secondly, because her father ( Forbes Masson) is unable to do the work himself, torn apart by past guilt and self-soothing with drink. Her artistry blends nicely with frustrated amateur painter Harry ( Taheen Modak), also trying to bring life to his work but, unlike Connie and her father, not worried about paying the bills. The play has a large supporting cast, but its strongest support comes from Posy Sterling (as servant Mary) and Akai Osei (as errand boy Davey), who both work well together with Proper’s Connie, and add light to the proceedings. Geoff Aymer, as long-suffering Lewis the butler, also adds some droll humour.

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