Inside the Green Room: Why did Ockham’s Razor chose Tess?

Ockham’s Razor Artistic Directors explain why they chose Tess

The UK’s foremost circus theatre company Ockham’s Razor presents a bold new vision of Hardy’s classic novel, Tess of the D’Urbervilles. Watch the stunning trailer to see their unique brand of emotional physicality come to life.

Below is a rich explanation from the artistic directors of Tess, Charlotte Mooney and Alex Harvey, explaining why they chose to adapt the novel and how the story still has broad appeal to modern audiences.

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Why Tess?

Central is a dancer performing as Tess of the d'Urbervilles in the Ockham's Razor prodcution Tess. Very fluid movement, her long skirt is twirling, as is her long dark hair. In the background are several dancers in similar dresses, most of them in a handstand and legs in a split position in the air.
Image by Kie Cummings

‘The answer to this starts with the fact that we both love the novel – in fact, at times, we have felt a bit haunted by it. Despite being written in 1891, it still seems to speak to this moment in time as it explores questions of privilege, class, poverty, agency, the need for non-industrialised agriculture, female desire, and solidarity. It also pulses with such a deep vein of beautiful pain around love and loss, heartbreak and yearning like no other novel.’

Tess of the D’Urbervilles has always struck us as such a very physical and visual book. Hardy paints this story with images alongside the deep poetry of the language, and at the centre of it is Tess, a character who experiences the world physically in all her journeying, labouring, desiring, and battling against the fate dealt to her. It is incredibly nuanced in its evocation of female relationships, sexual violence and female desire. We have long experience of working with reframing the female body with circus – looking at strength, capability and agency – and know there is a radical staging of this that is possible, and one where the subtlety, nuance and poetry of the novel could be captured by movement.’

Tess production photo: three performers dressed in similar, pale, linen dresses hug one another from behind; they are bathed in a warm glow.
Photo by Kie Cummings
Tess production photo: two performers bend over backwards to smile into one another's eyes; other performers lounge in a sparse wooden frame behind them.
Photo by Kie Cummings

‘Over time we came to write out our adaption where the story is told to the audience by an actor playing Tess – speaking to us just before her execution, looking back at the events that have led to that moment. She tells her story using Hardy’s words while an ensemble re-creates her memories onstage, the extreme physicality of the movement evoking the depth of emotion. Sometimes our actor becomes swept up by the ensemble and drawn into the action so that it is also an adaption which deals with the act of telling, of memory, of control and of fate.’

‘We are working with an actor and an ensemble of six incredibly skilled circus performers who use their strength and circus language to evoke the emotion and the physical labour of the novel. ‘

‘Our circus performers create Hardy’s Wessex onstage, wielding a series of wooden planks, shifting walls, ropes and swathes of linen to make sets that can unfold and which they balance upon, climb, carry and construct to become vast landscapes and interior worlds. Both a literal landscape and a depiction of Tess’s inner world – a parallel which is so strong in Hardy’s writing, this pinning and reflection of Tess’s experiences to the very world she inhabits.’

Tess production photo: four performers twirl in full-skirted white dresses, bathed in an orange glow; on the wall behind them, a red fire is projected.
Photo by Kie Cummings
Tess production photo: a performer in a full-skirted, pale linen dress struggles to carry 4 huge planks of wood on her shoulders; in the background, three other woman, similarly dressed, look on.
Photo by Kie Cummings

‘One of the surprises of the creation is how much joy and humour there is to find in the novel and the staging. Most people, when they think of Tess, remember how bleak and heartbreaking it is. It is a tragedy, but also there is a seam of joy in there, which is captured by the play and collaboration of the ensemble, and there is a reading where Tess moves towards annihilation but also action.

There is also a practical answer to ‘Why Tess?’ This book is part of the A Level syllabus and so is also an opportunity for us to reach new young audiences and introduce them to our art form and how it is perfectly placed to adapt this book about fate, class, struggle, heartbreak, yearning and redemption.’

‘Finally, we have been creating shows for 18 years – with each creation learning how to evoke worlds, relationships and meaning in circus. We feel that we have been working towards the making of this show for many years and now is the time to make it.’

Charlotte Mooney & Alex Harvey
Artistic Directors – Ockham’s Razor

Tess production photo: a performer in a white, full-skirted dress with long, dark hair sits astride a horse made from cloth and looks at a swirling blue galaxy, projected above her.
Photo by Kie Cummings
Tess will be performed at Northcott theatre on 11–12 Mar at 07:30 PM
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