Reviews

Sisterhood of the Travelling Lighter

By Courtney McManus and Hannah Quaden. Crash Theatre. Directed by Hannah Quaden and Ella Cooke. The Blue Room, Studio, Perth Cultural Centre, WA. May 16 - Jun 3, 2023

Sisterhood of the Travelling Lighter from Crash Theatre is a “celebration of the friendships that raise us”. Somewhat a “girl power” production with an all-female cast and production team, this somewhat tongue in cheek, magical little play is set on the university graduation day of a group of young women who have been friends since the first day of Year Seven.

That’s What She Said

By Josephine Gazard. Crisscross Productions. Director Suzanne Millar. The Vault at KXT on Broadway. 6 – 29 May, 2023

Though I couldn’t get to this production earlier in its run, it was one I was determined to see. There is no theatre more important than that which exposes wrong and inspires reaction.

The Wolves

By Sara Delappe. WAAPA Third Year Acting Students. Directed by Anna Houston. Enright Studio, WAAPA, Edith Cowan University, Mt Lawley, WA. May 18-20, 2023

WAAPA Third Year Acting Students have been split for the latest performance seasons. The women appear in this production of The Wolves, with their male classmates performing in brother production Fatherland. Directed with precision by Anna Houston, The Wolves follows a teenage girls’ indoor soccer team, over a six-week period.

Mr Bailey’s Minder

By Debra Oswald. The Guild Theatre, Rockdale. May 12 – June 10, 2023

Mr. Bailey’s minder – it’s a job no-one wants. Except Therese – desperately searching for something that will turn her life around, she needs to make it work, despite the odds.

Aging, once-famous painter Leo, now a spiteful, aging, self-destructive alcoholic, needs a full-time carer to remain in his eccentric home, decorated (if that’s the word for it) with his abstractions - yet he has driven away all previous comers, driving his daughter to distraction.

Fatherland

By Scott Graham, Karl Hyde and Simon Stephens. WAAPA Third Year Acting Students. Directed by Shane Anthony. Enright Studio, WAAPA, Edith Cowan University, Mt Lawley, WA. May 18-20, 2023

Fatherland is presented by the male WAAPA Third Year Acting Students and is designed, built and crewed by WAAPA Production and Design Students. Presented in tandem with the female students’ production of The Wolves, and played in the same venue, Fatherland is directed with style by Shane Anthony.

The Lighthouse Girl Saga

By Jenny Davis and Hellie Turner, based on the books by Dianne Wolfer. Theatre 180. Directed by Stuart Halusz. ACE Cinemas Midland, WA. May 19-28, 2023

Theatre 180’s The Lighthouse Girl Saga is told through their original concept CinemaStage, which pairs live acting on a temporary stage in a theatre, against a full cinematic backdrop, allowing the immediacy, intimacy, and intuition of live theatre to be paired with the intense imagery and high impact of cinema. The Lighthouse Girl Saga merges the four books of Dianne Wolfer’s Lighthouse Girl series - Lighthouse Girl.

Burrbgaja Yalirra 2

Presented by PICA and Marrugeku. Perth Institute of Contemporary Art, Perth Cultural Centre, WA. May 17-20, 2023

Burrbgaja Yalirra is Yawuru for “dancing forwards” and this production showcases artists who have performed in recent Marrugeku productions and allowed them to develop their own culturally informed contemporary dance works. There are three very different dance works on the program.

Moth

By Declan Greene. Theatre Works, St Kilda. 18 May – 3 June 2023

The great virtue of Moth is that it takes us into the world and the feelings of misfits, the rejected, the spurned, the picked-on and persecuted – and does not ask us to feel sorry for them. 

HMS Pinafore

By W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan. The Gilbert and Sullivan Society of WA. Directed by Paul Treasure. Dolphin Theatre, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, WA. May 18-27, 2023

It may be 145 years since the first production of HMS Pinafore, but The Gilbert and Sullivan Society of WA’s current sell-out production shows that this show can still pull a crowd, and capacity audiences for this production at the Dolphin will not be disappointed with Paul Treasure’s slightly modernised, fresh production.

Big Sing: The Sorcerer

By Gilbert and Sullivan. State Opera South Australia. Her Majesty’s Theatre – Grote St, Adelaide. May 21, 2023

What a splendid way to finish the G&S Fest. State Opera SA have done it again - The Sorcerer is a hit!

W S Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan’s third collaboration (if you count Thespis, rarely performed due to a large percentage of the work being lost), The Sorcerer had a small initial run of 175 performances and provided George Grossmith (the original G&S comedian) with a gift of a role, John Wellington Wells, the travelling sorcerer with a few tricks up his sleeve and one of the hardest patter songs in the repertoire.

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