I started getting eczema again recently. Scratching at the crook of my arm and on the back of my leg. It’s stress and exhaustion and it’s minor, really. Nothing like it was when I was in high school, when I’d scratch myself red raw, while trying every lotion and potion to calm the itch and various ways to suppress my skin scraping habit. Lighter blankets, different clothes and a new mattress. I even tried cotton gloves like the character of Paul does in Mature Skin, but to no avail.
Paul is a
fragrance designer for a range of products that are sold in one particular
brand of wellness shops that are dotted across the city. Jasmine works at the Melbourne Central
store. They meet in a nightclub and sparks fly and things start to spiral out
of control quickly, but they don't really care about the chaos. Neither is
comfortable in their bodies and both feel out of place in the world, so why
conform to society’s expectations?
The first complication
is the age difference: Paul is in his early 40s and Jasmine claims to be 20.
But she also says she was in year seven during the pandemic, so she might be
just 18. They both work for the same company, so the People and Culture manager
might frown upon it. Jasmine is trans, which Paul says he’s okay with, but we get
the impression it might be a fetish. And when Jasmine discovers Paul has
eczema, they start to reveal more and more about their passions, their desires,
their kinks and bad habits.
I stopped my
severe scratching after I left high school and discovered I was lactose
intolerant. It was the terror of high school and my inability to digest dairy
all along. Gabrielle Fallen’s new play brought some of that feeling back,
though. The relief I’d get from scratching and the personal disgust I had when
I was all scratched up.
Mature
Skin has the beauty
and wellness industry as a backdrop, but it’s more specifically about two queer characters' discomfort with their place in the world. Jasmine is saving up for
gender-affirming surgery and Paul is plagued by self-loathing and together they
are volatile, but neither of them are very stable alone, either.
What begins
as a trope-filled tale of the politics of an older man and his
sexual relationship with a much younger woman gets
much knottier: the reveals ratchet up the
tension and the squick factor pretty quickly. The show starts out as a messy
comedy of modern fucking manners but soon curdles into the kind of story writer Fallen calls a "rom-vom".
Designer
Harry Gill gives us an open cube bordered by LED lights with a long, marbled
bench nestled in the centre, acting as a pedestal they put themselves
on. It’s evocative of a cosmetics store, but it’s so imposing it also feels
like an altar for slaughter.
Emma
Lockhart-Wilson’s lighting design modulates smoothly between nightclub and
penthouse apartment and the Melbourne Central cosmetics store, sometimes isolating the
characters during their most intimate moments. Keeping Paul and Jasmine
spotlit and separated when they are having sex tells us so much about how
distanced they both are - from each other and from pleasure.
Fallen’s text asks a lot of actors Bailey Ackling Beecham and Peter Paltos, putting them through the wringer of heightened drama and biting comedy. Beecham and Paltos perform long, complicated monologues exposing Jasmine and Paul’s tortured souls and they are mesmerising.
Dialling up the drama in more mundane ways –
like the inevitable meeting with HR, feels like other plays like
this. But Fallen has built in a number of other rug-pulls that reframe the relationship in surprising ways. It's so nice to be surprised after a set-up like this.
Director Justin
Nott guides the two performers with a steady hand, helping them to hit each dramatic
revelation and crescendo as it comes.
Mature
Skin is dark and
twisted and refreshing in how fully honest it is about queerness, transness and
the eczematic urge to scratch that itch.
- Keith Gow, Theatre First
Mature Skin is running as part of Darebin Arts Speakeasy at Northcote Town Hall until March 22
Photos: Gregory Lorenzutti


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