Reviews

Still Point Turning: The Catherine McGregor Story

By Priscilla Jackman. Based on interviews with Catherine McGregor. Sydney Theatre Company. Wharf 1 Theatre. April 21 to May 26, 2018.

If you pitched this story as a piece of fiction it might be rejected as not plausible. The incongruity of a heterosexual man with a very healthy sex life, who works and excels in the most masculine of fields – the army, cricket commentary, and political speech writing – yet is being torn apart by acute gender dysphoria.

Piccadilly Olde Time Music Hall

Conceived and Directed by Kate Peters. Top Hat Productions. Gold Coast Little Theatre, Southport. April 27th – May 6th, 2018

The Olde Time Music Hall was a popular form of British entertainment of yesteryear, originating around the middle of the 19th century and lasting well into the 20th century. 

It featured many of the popular songs of the day, like “The Pheasant Plucker”, performed by the well-loved entertainers of the period, interspersed with the witty patter from the convivial Master of Ceremonies, Mr Martin Jennings. 

Personal

By Jodee Mundy. Jodee Mundy Collaborations. Arts House – North Melbourne. April 24 to 29, 2018 (and touring - see end of review)

Personal by Jodee Mundy is an acute insight into some of the strains and joys of being a ‘CODA’ – a hearing child born to a deaf adult / parents / into a deaf family.

As a short but intense 60 minutes of theatre, it frames, elucidates and distills this experience on a very personal, yet totally relatable to level, for a mixed audience of deaf and hearing.  This rewarding, compelling work brings deaf and hearing a little closer together both literally and through its delicate and sharp insights - crisply and clearly presented.

Tosca

By Puccini. Opera Australia. Director: John Bell. Conductor: Andrea Battistoni. State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne. April 24 – May 10, 2018.

I’d seen this lavish production before, and it still wears well. In Act 1 the church of Sant' Andrea della Valle looked magnificent with layers of gold on the walls, and in the gaol of Act 3 a guard patrolled the upper level as some frightened Jews try to sleep below.

Setting the opera in Nazi Germany worked well. I particularly liked the “shepherd boy” being a young Jewish lad inside the gaol, with an uncertain future. In the second act Scarpia molests an embarrassed female officer in front of the other soldiers.

 

The Time Machine

By Frank Gauntlett, based on the novella by H. G. Wells. Strange Duck Productions. Directed by Gareth Boylan. The Playhouse, NIDA Theatres, Kensington. April 11 – May 2, 2018.

Playwright Frank Gauntlett’s adaptation of H. G . Wells’ novella The Time Machine is based on the 1960s version of Wells’ original storyline for the film. Gauntlett’s play brings the themes of both H.G. Wells’ film and novella from the setting of the 1900s to present day issues of climate change and extinction.

Mark Lee, as the scientist and inventor of a time machine, discovers going into a future, 802,701 AD precisely, that there are no animal life present.

 

Hold Your Breath (Count to Ten)

By Daley King. Antifragile. Directed by Susie Conte. The Studio, The Blue Room, Northbridge, WA. April 23 - May 12, 2018

Daley King, writer of Hold Your Breath (Count to Ten), has issues. Fed up with the inability of theatre to tackle some issues, he is determined to make a theatre piece that deals with his own emotional, mental and physical debilities.

This doesn’t sound like the most uplifting premise for a play, and regular theatre-goers have all seen sagas of the depressed or broken artist before, but Hold Your Breath (Count to Ten) has a wonderfully fresh approach and this World Premiere from Antifragile is thoroughly engaging from start to finish.

The 78-Storey Treehouse

Adapted for the stage by Richard Tulloch from the book by Andy Griffiths & Terry Denton. CDP Kids Production. Adelaide Festival Centre. April 24 – May 5, 2018

I was really looking forward to seeing The 78-Storey Treehouse because the books are best sellers and boys in particular love them. However, I have to admit to being underwhelmed by the production and the adaptation generally.

The Cunning Little Vixen

by Leoš Janáček. West Australian Opera. Directed by Stuart Maunder. His Majesty’s Theatre, Hay St, Perth, WA. 21-28 April, 2018

In the first few moments of West Australian Opera’s latest production, a collection of gorgeously attired forest animals crawl, slide and bound on to the stage. It is the first sign that The Cunning Little Vixen is not your usual opera.

Mozart Requiem

Australian Chamber Choir. Conductor: Douglas Lawrence. Scot’s Church, Melbourne. April 22, 2018

The Australian Chamber Choir is one of the best small auditioned choirs in Melbourne, and has extensive experience touring Europe to critical acclaim. This was the first time I had encountered them.

The concert opened with Palestrina’s Stabat Mater, a short, eight part a capella work, sung exquisitely. There was lots of light and shade.

Right Now

By Catherine-Anne Toupin, translated by Chris Campbell. Red Stitch Actors’ Theatre. Red Stitch, East St Kilda VIC. 17 April – 20 May 2018

As this rather discombobulating play begins and you try to get a handle on it – or at least a reference point in the ‘real world’- you might be thinking, ‘Yasmina Reza… meets Harold Pinter?’  There is the polite bourgeois surface – about to be disrupted; there is the sense of imminent menace.  A previous reviewer cited Joe Orton and Rosemary’s Baby.  All these apply – and then some.  Meaning or comprehension keep dissolving, slipping away.  The seemingly banal becomes bizarre.  Normal social niceti

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