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Forgotten
Sherkin Island, West Cork

Pat Kinevane is an actor and writer best-known for his award-winning one-man show, Silent. That dealt with homelessness: Forgotten is about the predicament of characters in homes for the elderly.

Again, Kinevane plays all the roles, male and female, using Japanese Kabuki dance to segue from one the other. If that seems unusual, so too does Kinevane’s attire. He wears what might best be described as a loincloth and is tanned and hairless from head to toe, yet he is utterly convincing as he transforms from one elderly character to the next.

There are moments of pathos, such as when one character recalls the death of her neighbour, Nelly Dentures, whose body is found curled up in her suitcase, as if in preparation for her journey home. But there are moments of humour, too, as when another character imagines he is participating with Gay Byrne on one of his Late, Late Show antique-restoration specials, robustly defending all the work he has done to convert a cracked old mirror into a chaise longue.

Kinevane invites the audience to participate in the Alzheimer’s Support Group: ‘What do we want?’ ‘We don’t know.’ ‘When do we want it?’ ‘Who?’ It’s the kind of black material that might be offensive if it were uttered by a lesser comedian, but Kinevane transforms it into something cathartic and empowering.

At the end of the day, his characters are dependent on strangers, and he captures with great compassion their resilience in the face of failing health and the myriad indignities of old age.

The West Cork Fit-up Theatre Festival continues until August 19. Further information: www.westcorkfit-upfestival.com

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