Category Archives: Theatre Reviews

Sibyl

By William Kentridge. Joan Sutherland Theatre, Sydney Opera House. 2-4 November, 2023

Reviewed : 2 November, 2023*

Photo : David Boon

William Kentridge creates across the arts. In drawing, writing, film, performance, music and theatre he creates works that transverses cultures and generations. His work is represented in museums around the world. He has directed operas in New York, Milan, London, Lyon and Sydney. And for three days he returns to the Sydney Opera House with his cross-disciplinary work, Sibyl.

The performance begins with a film The Moment has Gone, shown on a filmy white screen that stretches across the opera theatre stage. The film shows Kentridge at work on plans and drawings in his animation studio. Slivers of film map the process as works come into being from initial lines to faces, scenes, figures that grow and change, move, and sometimes disintegrate. Some lovely touches of humour in the filming, and the accompaniment by pianist and musical director Kyle Shepherd and four vocalists are symbolic of Kentridge’s ability to fuse art forms.

Photo : David Boon

Shepherd and returns to accompany Kentridge’s chamber opera Waiting for the Sibyl, a Gesamtkunstwerk production combining music, dance, projections and shadow plays on a huge hand painted backdrop.

In Greek legends the Sibyls were prophetesses who made predictions about the future. In this production the ‘predictions’ are sayings and poems that are thoughtful, humorous and sometimes facetious comments about life and fate. They are sung in four Bantu languages and translated into English in large projections that are printed over pages of a dictionary.

The four vocalists – Ayanda Nhlangothi Zandile Hlatshwayo Siphiwe Nkabinde S’busiso Shozi  – are joined by vocalist and dancer, Nhlanhla Mahlangu and Xolisile Bongwana and dancers Thulani Chauke, Teresa Phuti Mojela, and Thandazile ‘Sonia’ Radebe to bring this amazing artwork to life.

Photo : David Boon

The filmy screen rises and falls over several scenes. In the first Nhlanhla Mahlangu and Xolisile Bongwana introduce the Sibyl’s predictions – singing and swirling, while other performers sift through handfuls of paper and drop them to drift and litter the floor. Shadows play on the screen behind the dancer. In another scene chairs become the centre of attention – and humour. Technology and timing are come together here in a segment that pays homage to the zannis of commedia dell‘arte.

Music, dance, drawing, film, comedy and mythology are cleverly interwoven in this production that is thought provoking as well as being colourfully entertaining. Sydney is fortunate to have William Kentridge back in the Opera House with Sibyl, his ingenious combination of so many theatre and visual arts.

First published in Stage Whispers magazine

* Opening performance

You Don’t Have To Be Jewish

By Bob Booker. Bondi Theatre Company. Director Ruth Fingret. Bondi Pavilion Theatre. 25 Oct – 5 Nov, 2023 and Emanuel Synagogue 15 – 19 Nov.

Reviewed : 28 October, 2023

Photo : Lindsay Kearney, Lightbox Photography

The 1960s was a special time for comedy albums. Comedians like Wayne and Shuster, Stan Freberg, Bob Newhart, Victor Borge, The Goons, Peter Cooke and Dudley Moore, The Goodies and Monty Python made LPs that entertained families around the world. Some of us remember them well, even still quote them!

Radio broadcaster Bob Booker was one of them. His album The First Family, a satire on President JFK and the Kennedy family, sold over 7.5 million copies and won multiple Grammy Awards. A demand for more resulted in another twenty-two albums, among them You Don’t Have to be Jewish, which was launched in 1965 and sold millions of copies.

The sketches and songs on the album have been quoted for years. With the permission of Booker, now 92 years old, they have been collected and published in Australia by DSPress. They are still very funny to read. Some are very short; others are put to music. But all were written to be recorded on an album, not performed live, on stage! So the decision to do so required some courage, as director Ruth Fingret explains:

Photo : Lindsay Kearney, Lightbox Photography

Directing it for stage has many challenges not the least being that we have forty scenes changes … we’ve had to honour the original recording, while also aiming to provide a satisfying theatrical presentation of a script that was originally written simply to be heard”.

Forty scene changes! Imagine the changes of character and costume! This can lead to a backstage nightmare – especially when some of the sketches are only a page in length. But Fingret and her stalwart cast and crew have attacked the task with typical thespian fervour – and Jewish humour!

They move from sketches of two characters to sketches of six. They change characters constantly. They sing and move to modest choreography. They make mischievous eye contact with the audience. Most of all they make people laugh.

They laugh because the scripts are funny. They laugh because the cast understands and captures the right intonations and timing. They laugh because the characters depicted are universal so ‘you don’t have to be Jewish’ to recognise them.

The six actors work with speed and diligence to present over a hundred characters. Just remembering the order of their character changes must be difficult, let alone making so many costumes changes. But they work well together, establishing each character with a stance, a walk, a gesture or an accent. Geoff Sirmai, James Burchett and producer David Spicer (who slipped into the cast with seven days’ notice), play fathers, sons, husbands, lawyers, doctors, husbands even cowboys. Christine Greenough, Liz Hovey and Andrea Ginsberg play different mothers and daughters, brides, wives, gossips, even a gypsy.

They play these characters with energy, good timing, and obvious enjoyment.

This is especially so in some of the longer sketches. In The Ballad of Irving (the hundred and forty-second fastest gun in the west), Spicer leads with the others doing backing vocals and doing fancy footwork. The Reading of the Will is one of the best known of Booker’s scripts and those in the audience who knew it well weren’t disappointed by Sirmai’s expectant face as he waited to hear whether his brother-in-law would remember him in his will.

Greenough and Ginsberg’s timing in A Call from Greenwich Village makes the scene especially funny. Liz Hovey uses her Theatresports experiences to good effect, especially as The Gypsy Fortune Teller. James Burchett plays all the younger men and a very effective teacher of Yiddish!

Photo : Lindsay Kearney, Lightbox Photography

Linking forty different scripts is difficult, especially as the content and contexts change as quickly in this production. Here the production team have come to the fore. Musical director and choreographer Aaron Robuck, design consultant Parish Stapleton and lighting designer Mehran Mortezaei work cleverly together to give the production needed continuity and colour. The set is utilitarian, with some quirky hand props. Live on keyboard, Robuck skilfully uses musical interludes to link or introduce scenes and Mortezaei picks up changes in ambience with subtle lighting effects. Mazel Tov!

The production pays homage to Booker and his clever, much-loved scripts – and introduces them to new audiences. The publication by DSPress also makes them available for future productions, and the possibility of linking them in different ways.

First published in Stage Whispers magazine.

Message in a Bottle

Sadler’s Wells and Universal Music UK, Directed and choreographed by Kate Prince. Based on the songs of Sting. Joan Sutherland Theatre Sydney Opera House. 25-29 November, 2023.

Reviewed : 26 October, 2023

Photo : Daniel Boud

Message in a Bottle comes from the UK to make its Australian premiere as part of the 50th birthday celebrations of the Opera House. Based on the music of iconic singer-songwriter Sting and choreographed by Kate Prince, it is an incredibly moving piece of dance theatre that pays homage to the millions of displaced people in the world today, refugees from harsh rule and devasting war seeking shelter and solace and a new, safe place to re-start their lives.

Photo : Daniel Boud

Choreographed and directed by Kate Prince, the twenty performers tell in interpretative dance the story of a family of four living in a gentle, happy community that is beset by civil war. Forced to flee, they wander for a time ultimately finding shelter in a refugee camp, before risking a perilous journey in an open boat where their “anxious eyes, search in darkness, with the rising of the sea. Incarcerated in a detention camp, watched over by heartless guards, they wait for years hoping “one day we’ll sing our freedom”. Time and loneliness haunt them, until, finally they are given a new chance in a safer land to “lie in fields of gold ”.

Photo : Daniel Boud

Their saga of fear, loss, survival, hope and love is told clearly through the simple clarity of Sting’s beautiful lyrics, with his music providing the various tempos for choreography that includes contemporary hip hop/street dance styles with breaking, locking and popping. Produced by ZooNation: The Kate Prince Company, it is fast, powerful, mesmerising and emotionally expressive.

Though the themes of interpretative dance are clear, it is sometimes a little difficult to follow the intricacies of the story. Not so with Message in a Bottle. Each song introduces a new chapter to the story, with the dancers adding graphic imagery and emotion through movement and dramatic, descriptive physicality. Using columns of side lights, fixed spots and some moving spots, rather than lighting from the front, designer Natasha Chivers highlights the complex sophistication of the movement and the transition from one scene to the next.

Photo : Daniel Boud

Set designer Ben Stone is similarly subtle, realising that the suggestion of a scene is sufficient – but making those suggestions perceptively poignant.  A circular mat is centred for a wedding celebration, then moved, as war rages to receive the sand that bleeds from “a little black hole in the sun”. Bed rolls carried by the asylum seekers become the sides of their crowded boat, and a live wall with images of increasingly large waves crashes behind them. Moveable frames become their detention ‘prison’ backed by images of barbed wire on high walls.

The twenty dancers –  Oliver Andrews, Lindon Barr, David Cottle, Deavion Brown, Harrison Dowzell, Nestor Garcia Gonzalez, Natasha Gooden, Lizzie Gough, Anna Holström, Megan Ingram, Ajani Johnson-Goffe, Daniella May, Dylan Mayoral, Lukas McFarlane, Robbie Ordona, Lara Renaud, Hannah Sandilands, Jessey Stol, Steven Thompson and Malachi Welch – bring Kate Prince’s production to Sydney for four short days. If you love dance, especially contemporary dance, try and see this production.

First published in Stage Whispers magazine

Memory of Water

By Shelagh Stephenson. Ensemble Theatre, Sydney. Directed by Rachel Chant. 20 October – 25 November, 2023

Reviewed : 25 October. 2023*

Photo : Prudence Upton

The title of this play by Shelagh Stephenson is based on the premise that no matter how much a water solution is diluted, the water will retain the ‘memory’ of the substance that has run through it. In some ways our memories are similar – but, as director Rachel Chant explains: “Memories are an act of subjective re-creation, altered and reconstructed to aid our own survival. No two recollections will be the same”.

In The Memory of Water Stephenson brings three sisters together to organise their mother Vi’s funeral. Naturally they begin to reminisce, and Stephenson uses their different perceptions of the past to show “the slipperiness of memory and the heightened, contradictory emotions that are released when you lose a parent”.

That it is a comedy is testament to the fact that families are funny, that even in difficult situations, memories evoke a host of nostalgic reactions, some of them sad, some of them contentious, some of them hilarious. It is the latter on which Stephenson – and Chant – concentrate, but not at the expense of poignancy nor tenderness.

Photo : Prudence Upton

The play takes place in the mother’s bedroom and designer Veronique Benett establishes the tone of the production with a set that is painstakingly pink, and plush, and prissy! The cupboards above the bed are stacked with paraphernalia – boxes, make up cases, a set of hot rollers! Trinkets clutter every surface, the satin quilt cover shimmers pinkly and a green velvet curtain covers the window and keeps out the cold, wintery Yorkshire night. The detail is fastidious and the changes in mood are fittingly intensified by Kelsey Lee’s mellow lighting.

The set reflects Vi’s personality and Chant uses it effectively, symbolically centring on and around the bed which is set on a double plinth.

Under the satin cover, the eldest sister, Mary (Michala Banas), wakes to ‘a visitation’ from a younger Vi (Nicole Da Silva) dressed in vibrant green satin, and sitting elegantly at the dressing table. Their hallucinatory conversation suggests that things were not always happy and this sets the tenor for the rest of the play as Mary and her sister Teresa (Jo Downing) and Catherine (Madeleine Jones) talk, argue, cry … and laugh.

Photo : Prudence Upton

Mary is a doctor who is deeply concerned about her patients – and deeply involved in a 5year relationship with Mike (Johnny Nasser) a celebrity doctor who is married with three children. Banas finds the acumen of the professional, the affectionate tolerance of the ‘big sister’ and the vulnerability of ‘the other woman’ in carefully judged and layered performance. Her immaculately timed pauses and the expressions that accompany them augment both the humour in her lines – and the devastating anguish she feels when a hope she has been clinging to for twenty-five years is cruelly crushed.

Teresa, the middle sister, who has spent more time with their mother runs an alternative well-being business with her second husband Frank (Thomas Campbell).  She is down-to-earth, organised, in control – except when she’s had a drink – and Jo Downing makes her busily caring and dependable – except when she’s had a drink! Then she becomes verbose, accusative, loud and wobbly. Her ‘wobbly’ is played very effectively by Downing who takes her there gradually through a slight slur, gradual increases in volume, more thoughtless reactions – and a delightfully natural slip off the end of the bed.

Photo : Prudence Upton

The youngest of the sisters, Catherine lacks the self-esteem of her older siblings – and Madeleine Jones plays her perfectly. Jones finds all of Catherine’s insecurities and attention seeking in a performance that is both funny and empathetic. Willowy and flexible, she gives Catherine an awkward but fluid grace as she paces sulkily, flings her arms expressively, as she wails about another failed romance, throws herself at the mercy of her sisters (who have obviously “heard it all before”), and turns for comfort to her brother-in-law Frank, who flees from her affection seeking approach!

It would be easy to believe that these three are sisters! Physically they are similar – and under Chant’s direction they have achieved that similarity of expression and gesture and reaction that is so often noted of female siblings, as well as the togetherness that comes from shared experiences and family jokes. Nowhere was this more evident than in a raucous scene that began with sorting their mother’s wardrobe – and ended with them parading on and around the bed in an array of colourful clothes and outrageous hats. The energy and pace of this scene was so carefully choreographed and meticulously rehearsed that it seemed spontaneous and absurdly natural.

Chant’s concentration on timing and pace ensured that naturalness and the depth that made the women – and Mike and Frank – so convincing.

As the ‘intimate observers’ in the play, Johnny Vasser and Thomas Campbell provide foils the sisters and deliver some delicious one-liners.

After an unexpected of entry, Vasser establishes both the intimacy and strained secrecy  of Mike’s relationship with Mary – and his wariness of her sisters, and though they voice their distrust clearly, he retains calm and taciturn, watching and always aware.

Campbell on the other hand, is one of the family, and hence the brunt of sisterly criticism and banter which he bears steadfastly and stolidly. Campbell has excellent comic timing and uses pause and pace to humorous effect – especially in his struggle to stop Theresa’s drinking, and in extricating himself from Catherine’s amorous attack.

Photo : Prudence Upton

Nicole Da Silva ‘s Vi ‘appears’ only for brief moments, almost drifting onto the stage, and wryly observing the effect of her demise … and highlighting her influence on her daughters.

The drawling vowels and missed consonants of the Yorkshire accent have been carefully schooled by dialect coach Linda Nicholls-Gidley and add to the veracity of the production, especially as the snowy winter is an intrinsic character in the play!

Rachel Chant has brought Stephenson’s play – first produced 27 years ago – to renewed, vibrant, funny, poignant life on a memorable set at the Ensemble. Sister siblings should see it together! (As one of four sisters, I know you’ll see yourselves!)

*Opening Night

 

Girls in Boys’ Cars

By Felicity Castagna. Adapted and directed by Priscilla Jackman. National Theatre of Parramatta. Riverside Theatres Parramatta. 25 Oct – 3 Nov, 2023

Reviewed : 21 October, 2023*

Photo : Phil Erbacher

Felicity Castagna writes about aspects of life that resound with ordinary people, especially ordinary young people growing up in the suburbs, away from the rarefied atmosphere of the CBD. Her characters come from different backgrounds, different cultures, from the Australia that is busy and varied, bubbling with hopes and expectations – and the strength that comes from overcoming disillusion and disappointment.

In Girls in Boys’ Cars, Castagna take her characters Rosa and Asheeka on a road trip in the style of Sal and Dean in Jack Kerouac’s On the Road. The girls ‘borrow’ Asheeka’s boyfriend’s car and take off from Parramatta to explore New South Wales. They are young and brave – and brazen. They end up in the sorts of predicaments you might expect, but approach them with strength, determination … and grit.

Their backgrounds are different – culturally, socially, economically. Director Priscilla Jackman describes the complexity of their friendship as … “simultaneously toxic yet ferociously loyal, naïve yet ferociously courageous, co-dependent yet deeply liberating”.

In fact, like many friendships! Rosa is a reader, a thinker. Boys ignore her. Asheeka is more open, flirtatious. Her boyfriend Dan is macho, one of ‘the boys’ who hang out with them in the parking area at Maccas!

Photo : Phil Erbacher

Jackman translates Castagna’s book into a play that captures the girls, the ups and downs of their journey, their excitement, and their problems. Production designer Melanie Lierty has created a set that suggests the momentum of the journey. Moveable screens, an adjustable table and stairs giving differing levels, cover changes of scene and place. Lighting designer Moran Moroney and sound designer Zac Saric add variations in mood and tone that blend with multimedia designer Mark Bolotin graphic images – huge maps, blurred photos, changing skies.

The production moves quickly, bolstered by busy cast members who move props and screens with speedy, practised choreography whilst also depicting the range of characters the girls meet along the way – and those they leave behind.

Ziggy Resnik and Nikita Waldron play Rosa and Asheeka. Their portrayals are strong and convincing, both finding the strengths of the characters, and the impact of their differences.

Photo : Phil Erbacher

Resnik makes Rosa thoughtful and wistful, reticent but open to suggestion, with an energy that is tightly controlled, and comic timing that shows her sense of humour and insightfulness.  The Rosa they portray wants more, but needs the confidence of someone like Asheeka to take the lead. Once ‘on the road’, Resnik shows Rosa’s growing self-assurance to make decisions (some of them wrong), and the strength to face the challenges that result.

Expressive and intuitive, Resnik shows the little changes in Rosa as she learns more about herself.

Asheeka is a little more worldly wise and Waldron shows that in Asheeka’s physicality.. Nonchalantly leaning against a post in the car park, she seems almost insolent, but still a little unsure of the effect she is having on her boyfriend Dan. She covers any lack of assurance with a tilt of her chin or a flick of her hip. Asheeka is seen as a leader, but Waldron finds her underlying anxieties. There is much baggage that Asheeka carries – her culture, parental expectations – and Waldron shows that in secret moments of despair.

Together they travel the road of self-discovery, a point that Jackman makes poignantly final scene of the play, where the girls are alone, strong enough to be making their own way to find their true self.

Photo : Phil Erbacher

The characters that people their journey – and establish each pace they visit or are ‘delayed’ – are played by Suz Mawer, Ella Prince and Alex Stamell, all of whom show remarkable energy as they move from character to character and manipulate the ever-changing scenery. Whether playing parents, or boys in the carpark, or police or corrective service officers, they find just the right stance, tone and expression that makes each character immediately recognisable and real. Managing the physical demands made on them by the director – and   the designer – is credit to their fitness and concentrated rehearsal.

Priscilla Jackman has stayed true to Felicity Castagna’s characters and the Parramatta that she writes about so clearly and lovingly.  Rosa and Asheeka show how places like Parramatta are full of thousands of “complicated and contradictory stories” that are rich and exhilarating. Jackman’s and her creative cast and crew show how theatre can bring those complications and contradictions to the stage in a “pulsating and contemporary Australian work”.

Also published in Stage Whispers magazine

*Opening Night

Heathers – The Musical

By Kevin Murphy and Laurence O’Keefe, based on the film by Daniel Waters. Blackout Theatre Company. Director Jordan Anderson. Pioneer Theatre Castle Hill. 20 – 29 October, 2023

Reviewed : 20 October, 2023*

Photo : Light Up Photography

Coming to this production ‘cold’ but having been advised of the ‘cult following’ of the movie on which it is based, I was still surprised by the exhilaration of the audience and their exuberant reaction to the characters and the music. The theatre vibrated with an air of expectation as the house lights faded. It was clear that most of the audience was there to greet the production with enthusiastic joy – and Jordan Anderson and his cast and choreographers didn’t let them down.

The characters from the 1988 movie, transported to the musical stage by Kevin Murphy and Laurence O’Keefe, were there live on stage and ready to bring the dark themes and black humour of the story to strident, energetic, brutal life. The eagerness of the audience was reflected in the vibrance of the performers, who hit the notes of “Beautiful” with professional pace and power – to the unbridled joy of the audience!

Photo : Light Up Photography

Anderson has approached the production with entertainment as the ‘sugar coated’ key that opens the door to the nastiness that gnaws at the heart of Westerberg High, nastiness engendered by the Heathers, a triumvirate of tartan-clad tartars who wield the power of ridicule and denigration. Boys bow to their beck and call; girls long to belong rather than being belittled. Only one of them – Veronica Sawyer – dares to break her way into the clique, admitting it’s just to get through high school without being demeaned!

Jenna Woolley plays Veronica with a cool spite that is tempered by innate intelligence and common sense. She approaches the Heathers with subservient charm – and the ability to copy others’ handwriting – all the while sharing her disdain with them and herself in her diary – and thus the audience. Woolley brings all the attributes of triple threat training to this role. She creates a Veronica that is believable but can also dance and sing, holding the long notes of some of her songs, for example “Fight for Me” with seeming ease and remarkable power.

It is not until she is attacked by Heather Chandler’s “henchmen” Ram and Kurt and turns to dark newcomer Jason Dean (“JD”) that she turns her back on her conscience and becomes part of his plan to eradicate Westerberg of the tyranny of the tartans.

Photo : Light Up Photography

JD is played with cruel charm by Aleks Justin. In a long black trench coat he steals into the high school scene from a murky life following his “de-construction” worker father in explosive jobs around America. He’s calm, cool, insightful and attractive – and Veronica is taken in by his ‘maturity’ and confidence. Unfortunately he is also vicious and sadistic and has no qualms about involving her in his plan to ‘cleanse’ the tenor of the school. Justin too has a great voice and their duet segments in “Our Love is God” are very moving.

As Heather Chandler, Katie Staddon strides powerfully on to the stage, much to the delight of the audience, who greet the character with cheers. In red tartan (of course) red knee boots and lots of swagger and sneers, Staddon epitomises the ‘girl gang’ leader’s queen status perfectly. With her off-siders, envious (green tartan!) wannabe leader Heather Duke (Claire Hutchison) and less assured (yellow tartan!) Heather McNamara (Haley McCudden), she lays down the law in “Candy Store”.

Photo : Light Up Photography

Tim Drummond and Will Smith have a ball playing Chandler’s (not so) heavy henchmen Ram and Kurt. Both have fine voices and also relish the suggestive, snaky dance moves devised for them by choreographers Daniella Giles and Lauren McKinnon.

Giles and McKinnon have chosen choreography to augment the darkness and mood of the music, stretching the performers with quick freezes and fast twists and turns in keeping with the malevolence of the story – and effectively raising the excitement of the audience. A piece of choreography that lingers with me for its planning and direction is a slow-motion fight between Drummond, Smith and Justin. Those three and the whole cast, arranged at different levels around the stage, move with perfect precision and control, keeping long, difficult freezes in a routine that creates stunning tension and tenseness.

Breaking the darkness of Heathers along with Drummond and Smith, are flamboyant teacher Ms Fleming, played with lovely comedic skill by Fiona Brennan, and the various Dads of the teenagers played by Simon Buchner and Tim Walsh. Their rendition of “My Dead Gay Son” is poignant as well as funny.

Photo : Light Up Photography

The themes in Heathers cover many of the problems that teenagers might face – bullying, homophobia, sexual assault, teen suicide, eating disorders, even murder. That they are covered in a way that makes them real but unacceptable is a credit to the writers. That they are tempered with black humour, loud, strong music and fast dancing takes some of the edge off the malice. That there is a suggestion of optimism doesn’t take away from the fact that the problems imagined by Daniel Waters back in 1988 continue and escalate … 30 years after the movie opened, and over 10 years after the musical was first performed.

Jordan Anderson’s production will meet every hope of Heathers fans – as well as keeping strong the messages about teenage angst, anger, anxiety … and fear.

Also published in Stage Whispers magazine

*Opening Nigght

Four Flat Whites in Italy

By Roger Hall. Director Tui Clark. Genesian Theatre. 14 Oct – 4 Nov, 2023

Reviewed : 15 October, 2023

Photo : Luke Holland, LSH Media

The ‘four flat whites’ in the title are two retired couples, recently acquainted, who are, inadvertently, travelling through Italy together. Written by prolific New Zealand playwright Roger Hall, the journey begins with a game of bridge in New Zealand and ends in a balmy night in Tuscany. What happens in between – disagreements, compromises, lost credit cards, finances and fun – is cleverly manipulated by Hall and the very identifiable characters he has created.

But … it’s not easy to transport a theatre audience from an apartment in Aotearoa to a pensione in Venice, or take them on a road trip to Rome and Tuscany. Yet … director Tui Clark has achieved this skilfully, by concentrating on the characters and the clever script –and using the original ecclesiastical architecture of the Genesian theatre to suggest the historical romance Italy.

The stage is open, the stained-glass windows and brick walls of the old church building suggesting past eras. Tui and scenic designer Gregory George have used the full width of the stage, adding archways and columns in pastel shades that suggest age, grandeur, and space – and provide a backdrop for Cian Byrne’s thoughtful and creative lighting. A table, four stools and a cunningly designed set of steps manipulated by two busy stage crew are the only props.

Photo : Luke Holland, LSH Media

The scenario is introduced by Adrian, a retired university librarian, who acts as a sort of narrator, introducing the other characters and chronicling the stages of the journey. Hall has used this device to move the story smoothly – and to add humour via Adrian’s witty asides to the audience.

Stewart-Hunter carries this role with professional aplomb, establishing a warm, on-going relationship with the audience through his excellent understanding of and connection to the rhythm and timbre of Hall’s writing – especially the asides which he delivers with perfect timing and wry expressions. The Adrian he portrays is affable, intelligent and socially perceptive but just a little diffident and reserved in the face of his wife Alison’s parsimony and seeming lack of affection.

Alison, also a retired librarian, is played intuitively by Penny Church. Church portrays a reticence in Alison that infers a want of empathy and trust – the reason for which eventually emerges. She makes Alison edgy, unable to relax, prickly and controlling – yet still allows the seasoned travellers in the audience to sympathise with her enthusiasm and knowledge. Church is a perspicacious actor who uses the inferences in the dialogue to define the different dimensions of Alison’s character – especially her fragility.

Photo : Luke Holland, LSH Media

Harry and Judy are the antithesis of Adrian and Alison. Harry, a divorcee, has retired early from his plumbing business and married Judy, his slightly younger secretary. “I am not a trophy wife” she announces sassily across the bridge table. Still in a “honeymoon” glow, they are suggestively affectionate and a little ‘indelicate’ in Alison’s eyes.

Christopher Pali plays Harry. Wealthy, a seasoned traveller and conservative voter, Harry is very self-assured, and Pali finds all of that in his performance, as well as a little arrogance that irks both Adrian and Alison – but is often ‘charmed’ away by Judy.

Judy is a bit of an enigma. She seems a little brazen and flirtatious – but she is also observant and compassionate, and Karen Pattison manages to portray all of that in a very energetic and engaging performance. She is mindful of the tension between the other couple, is sensitive to Adrian’s unhappiness and Alison’s touchiness – and finds ways to ease the tension and raise the ‘fun barometer” of the holiday, despite lost bookings, cramped cars and an insistent gondolier.

The nine Italians they meet along the way are played by Kimberlea Smith and Imran Khaliqi. Smith moves easily from petulant pensione proprietor to bored barista, and from keen dress salesperson to elegant English Italian Countess.

Photo : Luke Holland, LSH Media

Khaliqi has fun playing a waiter, a persuasive gondolier, a pushy gladiator and an elegant Italian count. That he makes such an impact in each of these roles gives credence to Stanislavski’s oft’ repeated comment about “small parts” and “small actors”.

Tui Clark’s canny and discerning direction takes the cast through a range of funny experiences … and some past grief, that is, happily, resolved. She ensures the depth and dimension that Roger Hall builds in the dialogue is strong and that the understanding between the characters grows as their real personalities are revealed.

This is an elegant production that relies on the actors, their director and a clever playwright to transport the audience into situations many of them recognise and with which they will identify.

Also published in Stage Whispers magazine

 

Banging Denmark

By Van Badham. Director Madeleine Withington. New Theatre, Newtown, NSW. 20 – 30 September, 2023

Reviewed : 24 September, 2023

Photo : Cambell Parsons

New Theatre spices up Sydney Fringe with Van Badham’s feisty feminist comedy Banging Denmark.

Misogyny, sexism, flirtation and seduction trip over each other wildly as Madeleine Withington’s young cast takes the stage with a blast of explosive energy. This play must be fast. Badham’s satirical words would lose their impetus and the characters their untamed power if the pace were anything but frenetic.

Withington ensures that by filling the theatre with loud music that sets the tempo – before Matt Abotomey, as wealthy ego-driven pick-up artist Jake Newhouse writhes suggestively as he gives advice on seduction to less successful male predators on his internet advice line.  Management consultant by day, Jake has no delusions about his own ability to charm …

Photo : Cambell Parsons

Until he happens upon Danish librarian Anne (Emelia Corlett) – who coolly and emphatically knocks him back.  In ego-affected agitation he turns for advice about a less seductive approach to famed feminist academic Ish Madigan (Sarah Greenwood) who herself has been left destitute after a defamation case and is living secretly in her office.

Ish is still steaming mad about the case – and men in general – and she’s not about to bow to his charms even when he offers her $50,000 – and a $1000 retainer. Enter her super -intelligent friend Dr Denyse Kim (Kandice Joy) who talks her through the situation. If anyone can really just ‘talk’ to Ish! – because Ish thinks and moves at a racing pace and keeping up with her ideas and reactions are almost impossible!

Greenwood hits that ‘racing pace’ and sustains it in a brilliant performance that is exuberant, quirky and unremittingly funny. Under Withington’s tight direction, the Ish Madigan she portrays is a dynamo, motivated, defensive, cynical, sarcastic and in control …

Until she too meets Anne, who turns out to be one of her greatest admirers. Their one-night stand complicates things – as does Denyse’s fling with Jake that upsets her gentle best friend Toby (Gerry Mullaly) who is really desperately in love with her.

Photo : Cambell Parsons

Badham throws love and lust and sexual controversy together in this sardonic rom-com that Withington directs with a pace that matches Badham’s short, spikey sentences and stinging satire.

Withington’s cast plays that satire with energy, vitality – and intelligence. All five hit the challenge of Badham’s fast exchanges and strong characters that they make bitingly, hilariously real.

What a shame it plays for such a short season!

First published in Stage Whispers magazine.

Is There Something Wrong With That Lady?

Written and performed by Debra Oswald; Director Lee Lewis; Ensemble Theatre; 18 Sept – 14 Oct

Reviewed : 22 September, 2023*

Photo : Prudence Upton

Debra Oswald chose as the title for her own story the words of a child who saw her crying in the aisle of a supermarket. What brought her to tears, she explains in her performance, was the song playing over the loudspeaker system as she did her shopping! Why it brought her to tears was the memory of it being used in the original production of her play Gary’s House – and her love for the flawed character of Gary who dies halfway through the play.

I understand Oswald’s feelings for that Gary – as did, I am sure, anyone else who directed the play – or taught or studied it for HSC Drama in NSW in the 1990s. Gary was battler, a struggler who eventually gave up, but who inspired others. As did so many of Oswald’s characters, especially ‘Therese’ in Mr Bailey’s Minder, another struggler, but one who didn’t give up!

Photo : Prudence Upton

Oswald’s love of theatre began early – but she never wanted to be on stage. She wanted to create the characters, write the words they said to each other. From Gary and Mr Bailey to the cops on Police Rescue, from two Bananas in Pyjamas to the medicos and their families in Offspring, Debra Oswald has created characters with whom audiences identified, believed in and loved.

Hearing her talking about creating and watching them come to life on stage and screen is a privilege and joy. Her description of working in “the writer’s room” is exhilarating, full of the satisfaction of collaboration, sharing ideas and jokes and decisions – as opposed to the isolation of writing alone.

Hearing her talk about the realities of being a writer is not quite so joyous. Without really complaining she tells of the hurt of rejection, and the even greater hurt of scripts or novels being ignored. Of being requested to write a series that never gets up. Of how easy it is to give up – and almost give in.

Oswald share more than her professional life. She shares memories of her parents. Of growing up Sydney’s northwest. Of watching medical programs on TV that led her to imagining all sorts of illnesses. Of romance and love, motherhood, grandchildren. Her strange in-laws and their obsession with teddy bears. And her handsome dog Clancy.

Photo : Prudence Upton

Is There something Wrong with that Lady? is more a memoir than a performance. A memoir written by a writer of dialogue who knows the importance of sequence and rhythm and pause. When to use rhetorical questions, humour, and asides. With director Lee Lewis, Oswald puts her own words into action, relaxing into the role of storyteller so that her ability to communicate personally and honestly shines through.

In her program notes director Lewis explains how unusual it is for a writer “to step out of the shadows and remind us that it all starts with a person sitting in front of a blank screen or sheet of paper.” To do so on stage is even more unusual. “It is generous,” Lewis says, “and brave, touching and slightly scary.” But Oswald overcomes any scariness with the power of her own words and her warm, outgoing personality.

*Opening Night

Human Activity

By Katie Pollock. bAKEHOUSE Theatre Co and Nautanki Theatre. Director Suzanne Millar. KXT On Broadway and Riverside Theatre. 15 Sept – 8 Oct, 2023

Reviewed : 20 September, 2023*

Photo : David Hooley

Twenty-five gold birdcages hang above a city square bathed in blue pre-dawn light. Like the cages, the space is empty but for a figure shrouded in blankets. As morning light filters in, flowers set against a wall can be seen, and early morning birdsong sounds. But there are no birds.

It’s an eerie beginning to Katie Pollock’s play. But Sydney in the first few weeks of June 2014 was strange, different. The siege at the Lindt Café in Martin Place had left the city on edge, nervy, suspicious.

It is on one of those wintery June mornings that Katie Pollock’s play is set. But the play isn’t about the Lindt Café siege. It’s about the undercurrent of life that goes on despite disasters – the undercurrent keeps ebbing and flowing beneath the big tides that wash over busy cities.

Photo : David Hooley

Her characters are ordinary people who might have been in the city at that time. Some, certainly, because of the siege. Like a security officer. Or people laying flowers at a shrine. Or voyeurs. Others, oblivious of any ‘news’ or strangeness, are there for reasons much more personal.

Through those characters and their stories Pollock reminds us of the real reasons that motivate Human Activity.

There’s a young woman, escaping domestic violence, who hunts for her stolen bag and the money she has scrimped away to pay for an abortion. An old couple searching for the battered suitcase they carry every year on a pilgrimage in memory of their daughter.

A woman who sells bottles of water and soft drink from a stolen esky. Another who offers flowers to those who might want to “pay their respects”. A group of ghoulish teenagers who stare, gossiping … “she went to our school,” one boasts.

And, in quieter moments, a little regiment of hungry city birds parades the pavement, watching warily, hopefully, swiftly dissolving into the shadows at the slightest sound …

Suzanne Millar directs a cast of ten who breathe life into these very vivid characters. She skilfully ensures that their stories – cleverly told by Pollock in snippets, begun and interrupted, then taken up again – move smoothly and clearly, interspersed by the vigilant birds who creep out warily to forage among the debris of human activity.

The mood of this play could be oppressive, but Millar uses the choreography of the birds to add lightness and hope. Backs bent, heads down, they walk in harmony, under the empty cages, stopping at a noise, changing direction, moving away as the next ‘instalment’ of a story begins.

Photo : David Hooley

All cast members are part of this ‘avian routine’ that changes the aura of the production as effectively as Benjamin Brockman’s moody lighting and Jessica Pizzinga’s city sounds.

A constant in the production is Jana, the homeless woman who emerges from the bundle of blankets. Strong despite her situation – nay, because of it – Jana is belligerently vocal but caring and wise. Katherine Shearer finds that strength and wisdom in the Jana she plays. She gives her a vitality and energy that spurs her and infects those around her, especially Arti, the woman who has lost her ‘escape’ money.

Trishala Sharma plays that difficult role finding the anxiousness and fear that dog those caught in the twisted, knotted web of domestic abuse and control. She is constantly on edge, her distress evident in her frightened eyes, panicked voice, and eventual violent self-harm.

Claudette Clarke and Phillip Lye play the old couple still trying to understand their daughter’s ‘journey’ to escape her abusive relationship. Both bring a sense of confused despair to their story, a naïve simplicity that is out of place in the busy tension of the city at that time. Their quiet reasoning and trust in each other are very moving.

Atharv Kolhatkar plays a security guard who is keen restore order and compliance. He is nervous, still jumpy, anxious to move any ‘problems’ away from his jurisdiction – especially when the students, the drink lady and the flower seller – Josephine Gazard, Karina Bracken, Mason Phoumirath, Madhullikaa Singh and Teresa Tate Britten – get into a loud argument about flowers and stolen money.

Photo : David Hooley

No character is more poignant than the curious, hungry, brave cockatoo played with elegant, bird-like dignity by Karina Bracken, firstly as she warily approaches Arti in hope of some food and water – then as she perches alone in the dying afternoon light, explaining quietly that one of her claws which has withered and wasted due the effect of chewing, will mean that she will soon be unable pick up or hold any food …

There is human warmth, truth and understanding in this production. It comes originally from the Pollock’s compassion and empathy, and her deft creation of each character, but it is intensified by Suzanne Millar’s sensitive, perceptive direction and the collaborative approach she brings to all her work.

Also published in Stage Whispers magazine

*Opening night