Reviews

Every Brilliant Thing

By Duncan Macmillan with Jonny Donahoe. Belvoir St Theatre, Sydney. Director: Kate Champion. 10 - 26 January 2020

Less than a year later, Every Brilliant Thing makes a great return visit to the Belvoir stage but, instead of being a one-woman show (with Kate Mulvany), it’s now headed by a man. Steve Rodgers has only recently been playing the grumpy Walter Matthau role in The Odd Couple at the Ensemble. Here he’s the opposite: kindly and compassionate, uncertain of the future, clutching desperately to every brilliant thing about life that he can imagine.

Dr Doolittle Jr

Book, music and lyrics by Leslie Bricusse. Players Theatre, Ballina. Director: Peter Harding. 10th – 25th January, 2020

Ballina’s Youth production this year is Dr Doolittle Jr, an adaptation of the popular Twentieth Century Fox movie and staged by and for young people.

With a cast ranging from 8 to 17, director Peter Harding has crafted the production to the talents of his large junior company.

In only his second experience on stage, the Doctor was in the capable hands of Declan Lodge, a youngster with a big future, who was suitably supported by Erica Little, Elisha Lodge, Evie Sargent, Reuben Addington, Hugo Addington, Nichole Travers and Riley Evens.

SIX

By Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss. Louise Withers, Michael Coppel and Linda Bewick. The Studio, Sydney Opera House. Opening Night: January 9, 2020. Comedy Theatre Melbourne, from April 23. Her Majesty’s Theatre, Adelaide, from June 11.

SIX is a musical unlike any Tudor history lesson! Ever!

Reincarnating Henry VIII’s six wives today as vibrant, irreverent, contemporary pop divas (conveyed by fabulous local triple threats), SIX is a constantly surprising ‘her-story’, seen through a 21st century lens, while deflating long perpetuated myths.

Lady Tabouli

By James Elazzi. Riverside’s National Theatre of Parramatta and Sydney Festival. Riverside Theatres Parramatta. January 9 – 18, 2020.

In a short, opening scene of James Elazzi’s play, Danny (Anthony Makhlouf) and Josephine (Nisrine Amine), dance as children to a tape of famed Lebanese singer and actress, Sabah. Josephine encourages Danny to “dance like Sabah” and in a “dream sequence” to the side of the stage Sabah, complete with flowing blonde hair and shimmering dress, appears briefly to him demonstrating her sinewy hip movements for him to imitate.

Betty Blokk-Buster Reimagined

Sydney Festival. Magic Mirrors Spiegeltent. January 7 – 26, 2020

Betty Blokk-Buster hit Australian audiences with a raunchy belly blow in 1975. Reg Livermore’s saucy, white-faced, bare-bottomed, feather duster-flicking, cabaret-style ‘hausfrau’ charged on to the stage challenging critics to accept that his performance was much more than a “wank”!

Black Ties

Ilbijerri Theatre Company and Te Rehia Theatre. Sydney Festival. Sydney Town Hall. 10 – 18 January, 2020

Two smitten lovers, one Aboriginal, the other Maori, try hard to unite their families, their cultures, behind their engagement.  

Back home in the Maori community or atop a towering Melbourne housing estate, Kane and Hera’s efforts to assimilate produces some hilarious disasters in cultural protocol.  But somehow the wedding is booked – despite possessive Mums running indigenous guilt trips, fierce racisms across the ditch, errant males and some toxic family baggage.

Kurios

Cirque du Soleil under the Big Top, Hamilton, Brisbane. 10 January – February, 2020

Like Disney, Cirque du Soleil has developed a brand as leaders in their field of modern circus: trapeze, contortion, acrobatics and aerial feats, all surrounded by humour (often eccentric) and live music. It’s been a winning formula for forty shows since Montreal street performers Guy Laliberte and Gilles Ste-Croix created their first show in 1984.

Black Cockatoo

By Geoffrey Atherden. Ensemble Theatre, Sydney. Director: Wesley Enoch. 4 January – 8 February 2020

The setting of Geoffrey Atherden’s new play is the back room of a museum, a storage unit with many itemised boxes and a large, rolling ladder. It’s a brilliant vision for the play from Set Designer Richard Roberts, and director Wesley Enoch makes great use of the space. Enoch is also the Artistic Director of the Sydney Festival, which opened the day before, so cheers and congratulations to him. He looks pretty fit.

Wolfgang’s Magical Musical Circus

Circa, Cremorne Theatre, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC) Brisbane. 7 to 18 January, 2020

Albert Einstein once said that Mozart’s music was “so pure that it seemed to have been ever-present in the universe.” Explaining such perfection is difficult – we can only articulate that the music seems complete in its melody, clarity and balance. As if taking up this challenge, Brisbane-based and internationally renowned contemporary circus group, Circa, has produced Wolfgang’s Magical Musical Circus.

Mamma Mia!

Music & Lyrics by Benny Andersson, Bjorn Ulvaeus & Stig Anderson. Book by Catherine Johnson. Holiday Actors. Director: Angela Kenna. Vocal Director: Elana Agnew. Choreographer: Beth Loft. Musical Director: Nikki Nuske. Sets: Lyle Russell & Angela Kenna. Lighthouse Theatre, Warrnambool. January 7-11, 2020.

Another outstanding summer show from an onstage cast of almost 60 performers aged between 13 and 20.  The popularity of this 35 year old company has ensured a sold out season even before curtain up on opening night. (No mean feat selling over 3,500 tickets!)

What struck me from the outset was the precision of the 10 piece band under the skilful direction of Nikki Nuske. Each musician, including four keyboardists (this is ABBA music after all) was on the mark.’

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