Reviews

You Should Be Dancing

By Everybody NOW! Presented by Darebin Arts Speakeasy in association with Melbourne Fringe. Main Hall, Northcote Town Hall Arts Centre. 20 -22 September, 2019.

The performance collective Everybody NOW! has a highly inclusive approach to its concept of dancing. This event brings together an eclectic collection of dance styles and performers who congregate to celebrate a wholesome, family-oriented activity. The show goes out of its way to welcome people of all ages, abilities, races and nations.

Flutter and Flounce

Po Po Mo Co. Melbourne Fringe Festival. Fringe Hub: Trades Hall – Quilt Room. 21 – 29 September 2019Flutter and Flounce

Award-winning queer comedy troupe Po Po Mo Co present their latest show, Flutter and Flounce, for the Melbourne Fringe Festival. It explores life’s more intimate moments through movement, including a passionate first date and farting in an elevator.

The show contains energetic pop and rap songs, with a bit of musical theatre to boot. I enjoyed the very energetic number from Chicago. Their Cats interpretation was far less creepy than previews from the up-coming movie.

Frantasia

By Frankie McNair. Melbourne Fringe Festival. The Rattlesnake Saloon, 140 Lygon St, Carlton. 19 to 24 September 2019

Frankie McNair presents her first solo show at this year’s Melbourne Fringe Festival. The comedian has been working hard, appearing around the country in the award-winning duo Sweaty Pits with Miriam Slater. Her performance of Frantasia sold-out in her hometown of Canberra.

While Sweaty Pits was fully sketch comedy, Frantasia is more stand-up, with a good seasoning of sketch. Her vision is to remind us of “the joy in play and the ridiculousness of life”. She harnesses this with hilarious and creative stories, enhanced with props and pop songs.

Muriel’s Wedding

Music & Lyrics: Kate Miller-Heidke & Keir Nuttall. Book: P.J. Hogan. Global Creatures. Director: Simon Phillips. Musical Supervisor: Isaac Hayward. Musical Director: Daniel Puckey. Choreographer: Andrew Hallsworth. Lyric Theatre, QPAC, Brisbane. Opening Night: 21 September 2019

Muriel’s Wedding – The Musical is a hoot and a half. Well, for the first half at least. If it loses steam in the second it’s because the plot takes a darker turn.

John

By Annie Baker. Outhouse Theatre Co & Seymour Centre. Director: Craig Baldwin. Reginald Theatre, The Seymour Centre, Sydney. 19 September – 12 October 2019

John takes me back to a time when plays in three acts (and two intervals) lasted four hours, and to settings of interiors that seem so complete you could move in for the night. Recently at the Reginald Theatre I’ve seen a single table stand as the setting for six generations of a family: not here. John is played on a set as complete, as polished and as real as anything I’ve seen in Sydney theatre for many years.

John Barrowman in Concert

Concert Hall, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), 21 September 2019.

Sometimes the stars align and a magical night ensues. John Barrowman’s exclusive one-night-only performance in Brisbane at QPAC coincided with Brisbane Pride and the Oz Comic-Con. This made for an extra special audience mix who, as Barrowman said, simply ‘get it’ – or, to misquote Tim Rice, ‘they know him so well’.

The Nutcracker

Peter Wright. The Australian Ballet, with Orchestra Victoria. Arts Centre Melbourne. 17th – 28th September 2019, then 8 – 12 October (Adelaide) and 30 November – 8 December (Sydney)

Opening night was the 118th performance of Peter Wright’s The Nutcracker and there really is nothing new here. Having said that, it’s a must see whenever it comes to town because The Nutcracker is a delightful narrative ballet telling the story of a young ballet students, Clara and her Christmas eve journey to wonderous lands where she will eventually be transformed into the Sugar Plum Fairy.

I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Cooking For

Stage Mom theatre collective. Melbourne Fringe. September 19 – 28, 2019.

Jamie Oliver is the quintessential charismatic chef, a true master of the thirty minute no fuss meal, and for over a decade he has changed the way we cook and think about our food. And so has every other television celebrity chef, who owns restaurants and publishes signature cookbooks.

The Diary of Anne Frank

By Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett. Castle Hill Players. The Pavilion Theatre, Castle Hill. September 20 to October 12, 2019

Few World War II stories are more touching than schoolgirl Anne Frank’s naïve description of the three years she and her family spent hiding with others from Nazi occupation above her father’s factory in Amsterdam.

Her guileless words tell the story of eight people crowded together in a makeshift hideout, keeping silent by day lest the factory hands grow suspicious. How they shared meagre rations scrounged on the black market by two trusted friends. How they lived in fear every moment of being informed upon by ruthless Nazi sympathisers.

This Is Our Pilot

Created & performed by Annie Lumsden & Lena Moon. Melbourne Fringe Festival. Coopers Inn, Exhibition Street. 20 – 27 September 2019

Here’s the set-up: Annie and Lena have (somehow) secured an interview to pitch some ideas for new television shows to Mr Big TV Man (unseen).  The motive is more mercenary than artistic.  Thus their show has the opportunity to reference – and send up – a variety of television show genres: the ‘reality’ show, the quiz show, the Playschool type show, and so on. 

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