Reviews

Barbara and the Camp Dogs

By Ursula Yovich & Alana Valentine. Belvoir St Theatre, Sydney. Directed by Leticia Cáceres. April 4-28, 2019

Sydney’s Surry Hills is full of pubs where you’d see a band rocking the house. And so it’s not out of place to see such a scene at the Belvoir, where Barbara and The Camp Dogs first played in 2017 and are back for a return season. This time, it’s a tour too, with gigs in Brisbane, Melbourne and other cities. This award-winning band (and the musical they’ve created) needs to be seen by more people.

Band Geeks

Music by Mark Allen. Music and Lyrics by Gaby Alter. Book by Tommy Newman and Gordon Greenberg. Black Box Performing Arts. Directed by Katherine Friend. Old Mill Theatre, South Perth, WA. April 5-7, 2019

Black Box’s Australian premiere of Band Geeks is a fun musical celebration of geekiness, the joy of teamwork and music, performed by a top notch cast, in a well realised, high energy production.

In a show about bands, a great quality brass band was a must, and Musical Director Chadwich Beins has managed to cram an 11 piece band into very limited space backstage, and have them create great sound.

Groping for Words

By Sue Townsend.Tea Tree Players (SA). Tea Tree Players Theatre. 3 – 13 April, 2019

Set in a small creche within an old school building, a middle-aged woman takes on an Adult Literacy class. Initially, just two students reluctantly turn up: Thelma, a young nanny, and George, who is living in a hostel, but the acting school caretaker, Kevin, is also taking an interest in what’s happening in the classroom.

The Boy from Oz

Book by Nick Enright. Music by Peter Allen. Koorliny Arts Centre and the Kwinana Industries Council. Directed by Brad Tudor. Koorliny Arts Centre, WA. April 5 - 20, 2019

The Boy From Oz bursts with outstanding performances in a very slick production by Koorliny Arts Centre and the Kwinana Industries Council.

Jesse Angus becomes Peter Allen in a dynamic and deep performance with very little down time. His energy, excellent voice and vibrance keep the show exciting throughout. While Jesse is outstanding, this is much more than a one-man-show, with bravura performances at almost every corner.

I’ll Be Back Before Midnight

By Peter Colley. St Jude’s Players (SA). St Jude’s Hall. April 4th – 13th, 2019

If you like ghostly tales with a twist and don’t mind jumping out of your chair at the theatre, then St Jude’s Players’ latest offering will be right up your alley. Canadian playwright Peter Colley wrote this Hitchcock-styled psychological thriller over 20 years ago and it has lost none of its spine-tingling charm.

Vladimir The Crow

Created and performed by Paul Bourke. Melbourne International Comedy Festival. Melba Spiegeltent Studio, Collingwood. April 4 – 20, 2019

Vladimir The Crow is currently performing at the small and intimate space of the Melba Studio, located somewhere between the Spiegeltent and meandering corridors at Circus school on Johnston Street in Collingwood as part of the Melbourne International Comedy Festival.

Dark Voyager

By John Misto. Castle Hill Players. Pavilion Theatre, Doran Drive Castle Hill. April 5 – 27, 2019

As the premiere community theatre production of John Misto’s play, this is another coup for a theatre company that is prepared to give its directors and actors ‘some meat’ – and challenge its audience with something a little bit different.

The Miracle Worker

By William Gibson. Adelaide Repertory Theatre. Arts Theatre. 4 – 13 April 2019

William Gibson’s The Miracle Worker was first performed in 1959, winning the Tony Award for Best Play for the Broadway season1959-60. This season is notable for the number of plays and musicals that centred on strong and formidable matriarchal female characters. This includes Lillian Hellman’s Toys in the Attic, Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun, and Tennessee Williams’ Sweet Bird of Youth, as well as Gypsy by Jule Styne, Stephen Sondheim, and Arthur Laurents.

The Last Five Years The Musical

Written and composed by Jason Robert Brown. Ensemble Theatre (NSW). March 29 - April 27, 2019.

Christian Charisiou and Elise McCann didn’t so much perform their roles in this musical – more like they drank every last syllable and catchy songs with ecstatic reverence. You could see and feel how much they love the work.

In the two handed musical, Jamie Wellerstein is a Jewish writer who becomes smitten with the non-Jewish actress Catherine Hiatt. She starts the musical at the end of their relationship, he at the beginning and they meet somewhere in the middle.

Life: The Show

The Spiegeltent - Canberra Theatre Forecourt. March 30-April 21, 2019

It’s the Spiegeltent. You know you’re in for world class slick cabaret, raunchy dance, clowning, costumes, but for me the most spectacular parts of Life: The Show were the surprises.  When they attach a couple of grappling hooks to the belt loops Violent Femmes’ session sax player and hoist him into the air, and he continues to play while spinning and summersaulting around, it’s jaw-dropping. (His name is Blaize Garza and he doesn’t miss a beat of Madness’ "One Step Beyond", even when upside down).

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