State Theatre Company SA 2018

State Theatre Company SA 2018

State Theatre Company might be starting 2018 in London but will end the year in Port Pirie with its largest ever state-wide touring program taking productions to 14 venues across South Australia.

Touring venues will include Port Pirie, Elizabeth, Golden Grove, Noarlunga, Mount Barker, Goolwa, Renmark, Mt Gambier, Barossa, Whyalla, Pt Lincoln, Roby Downs, Port Augusta and Leigh Creek.

2018 will also mark the Company’s biggest ever season with two additional productions, and its highest number of commissioned works - four of the nine productions will have their premiere in South Australia.

Next year, Artistic Director Geordie Brookman (pictured above with Executive Director/Producer Jodi Glass – photo by James Hartley) explores belief as a core theme running through the program, with many of the stories set in regional communities as the Company renews its focus on South Australia.

“2018 represents another ambitious step in the company’s aspiration to deliver international class theatre all over South Australia, the country and the world,” says Geordie Brookman. “I’m delighted that four out of our nine works come from our commissioning program, reaffirming our commitment to being one of the best new work companies in the country.”

2018 will also be the second year for the recently formed State Theatre Company Ensemble, a group of actors and creatives who’ve taken residence at the Company to work on a number of productions.

The year will open with In The Club, the first of State Theatre Company’s commissioned productions. Written by Patricia Cornelius, In The Club explores the off-field culture surrounding AFL players, treatment of women and the club behind the club.

I’m thrilled to be bringing the bombastic work of Patricia Cornelius to the company,” says Brookman. “When the ensemble and I thought about writers we would be excited to create a new work with Patricia was top of the list. In The Club is powerful, unforgiving and unashamedly high risk.”

The comedy of manners After Dinner play at the Dunstan Playhouse (7-29 April) with its story of eccentric lonely hearts in a 1980s pub, a night of bad dance moves and tested friendships.

Written by Andrew Bovell (The Secret River, Lantana), After Dinner will be led by Jude Henshall (Mr BurnsThe Comedy of Errors) and see the Adelaide return of Nathan Page star of State Theatre Company’s production of The 39 Steps. It will be directed by Adelaide-based Corey McMahon, who enjoyed success last year with the national tour of Orwell’s 1984.

“I couldn’t think of a better way to celebrate one of our most loved playwrights, Andrew Bovell, than by reviving his delicious early career comedy,” says Brookman. "It’s fall off your chair funny, fabulously inventive and utterly poignant in the way it talks about how and why we love.”

Kate Hamill’s adaptation of Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility has enjoyed a series of seasons in New York over the last few years. Described as one of the finest adaptions of the literary classic, it will be presented by Geordie Brookman and State Theatre Company Ensemble.

“To bring our ensemble’s time with the company to a close we wanted to embark on a project that would represent pure theatrical joy” says Brookman. “In the collision of Jane Austen and American actor / playwright Kate Hamill we’ve found a piece that provides a limitless landscape for comedic invention while digging into the heart and soul of one of the Western canon’s great works.”

May 2018 will see the world premiere of Fleur Kilpatrick’s Terrestrial open at the Matthew Flinders Theatre (2 – 4 May) before then touring in regional and metro South Australia (until June 19) and returning to Adelaide’s Space Theatre (May 23 – June 2). The Jill Blewett Playwright Award winner makes her debut with State Theatre Company.

Set in Leigh Creek, Terrestrial centres on the connection between a newly arrived outsider and a local in a small remote town, against the backdrop of the community collapsing in on itself with the impending mine closure.  Terrestrial will be directed by the State Theatre Company’s former Resident Director Nescha Jelk.

“One of our two Jill Blewett award winners Fleur Kilpatrick has created a tender yet twisting tale of social dislocation in regional Australia,” says Brookman. It’s a beautiful new work that announces another powerful voice to the State Theatre Company stage.

State Theatre Company will co-produce with Malthouse Theatre, Brothers Wreck at the Odeon Theatre (June 27 – 14 July), written and directed by Jada Alberts. Brothers Wreck follows the story of a young man in a changing world forced into a journey of self-discovery following a family tragedy. The co-production follows State Theatre Company’s collaboration with Malthouse on The Events in 2016.

“Jada Albert’s incredible debut knocked me for six when I saw the original production in Sydney some years ago,” says Brookman. “I’m delighted that we’re coproducing a new version with the brilliant Malthouse Theatre under the direction of Jada herself. No audience member will leave the theatre with a dry eye or indeed without hope in their heart.”

Duncan Graham’s twisting new version August Strindberg’s emotional thriller Creditors arrives in Adelaide in July. Directed by David Mealor and starring Caroline Craig (Anzac Girls, Blue Heelers), the three character play promises to keep audiences guessing to the end.

“Duncan Graham is one of the most intelligent playwrights South Australia has produced, says Brookman. “In Creditors he’s taken the tricky but brilliant bones of Strindberg’s minor classic and turned it into a sizzling thriller.”

A stage adaptation of Tim Winton’s 1986 novel That Eye, The Sky by Justin Monjo and Richard Roxburgh will be directed by Kate Champion. It’s the second stage adaption of a Tim Winton novel Kate has worked on, having previously choreographed the production of Cloudstreet.  That Eye, The Sky follows the story of a 12 year old trying to make sense of life in a small country town, one of a number in the season set in small regional communities. The cast includes State Theatre Company Artist in Residence Elena Carapetis.

“I’ve been wanting to program That Eye, The Sky for years but have been waiting for
the perfect team to come together,” says Brookman. “Being able to reunite the visionary director / choreographer Kate Champion with designer Geoff Cobham to create a rich landscape for Tim Winton’s beautiful words is tremendously exciting.”

Emmy and Golden Globe Award winner Judy Davis will direct her husband Colin Friels in Brian Friel’s Faith Healer (September 26 – October 13) in the Belvoir Production presented by the State Theatre Company.

Faith Healer is made up of four monologues performed by three characters – Francis Hardy (Colin Friels) the titular healer, his wife Grace (Alison Whyte) and his manager Teddy (Paul Blackwell). Each share their perspective on itinerate lives together. As the stories unravel a web of half-truths and personal mythologies is revealed.

“Sometimes you see a production and just know that you have to program it. That was the case with Faith Healer,” says Brookman. The combination of one of the greatest pieces of dramatic storytelling in the 20th century, one of Australia’s best directors in the legendary Judy Davis and three of the country’s finest actors in Colin Friels, Alison Whyte and Paul Blackwell made Faith Healer one of the easiest decisions in my tenure. It’s theatrical dynamite.”

2018 ends in Port Pirie with The Gods Of Strangers with local playwright Elena Carapetis bringing the stories of her Greek and Cypriot family to the stage in a play that explores the immigrant experience in post-war Australia.

The Gods of Strangers represents a signifcant moment for State Theatre Company,” says Brookman. “The debut of a large scale new dramatic work is always to be celebrated but in this case we also celebrate the fact that we are premiering a work made through drawing on the stories of two of our migrant communities and their experiences in one of our regional centres, Port Pirie.”

After launching the 2018 season, Geordie Brookman announced his contract extension until 2019 when he’ll become one of State Theatre Company’s longest serving Artistic Directors. As part of a well-managed succession plan for the Company, Geordie will program the 2019 season, his seventh for the Company, before handing over the reins to a new Artistic Director in mid-2019. Later in 2019, Geordie is planning a move to Europe with his young family.

statetheatrecompany.com.au

Subscribe to our E-Newsletter, buy our latest print edition or find a Performing Arts book at Book Nook.