Reviews

The Secret Garden

Book & Lyrics by Marsha Norman. Music by Lucy Simon. Based on the novel by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Eastwood Uniting Church Musical Society. Director Katherine Sharpham, Musical Director Rebecca Hansen. 27th October -11th November 2017.

Eastwood Uniting Church Musical Society’s production of the musical adaptation of the famous novel by Frances Hodgson Burnett was a truly magical interpretation of the fantasy tale for all ages.

Anything Goes

Music and lyrics by Cole Porter. New Book by Timothy Crouse and John Weidman. Beenleigh Theatre Group. November 10 – 25, 2017

Cole Porter’s Anything Goes is a classic musical comedy of the “they just don’t make ‘em like that anymore” variety. In an era of celebrity worship drawn from every walk of life, this old-fashioned musical feels as contemporary as the day it was written. Under Director Michael Skelton’s eye, three love stories play out to their final, delightful moments.

The Tap Pack

Directed by Nigel Turner- Carroll. The Arts Centre Gold Coast. November 11, 2017, and touring.

I’d like to say Tap is back - but the truth is it never went away.

However, The Tap Pack is back after their triumphs overseas, and it’s been worth the wait.

Little Shop of Horrors.

Book and Lyrics Howard Ashman. Music: Alan Menkin. Gold Coast Little Theatre, Southport. Director: Brady Watkins. Nov 11th – Dec 9th, 2017                                                            

Audrey ll, the blood thirsty, flesh eating plant stars in this staging of the popular cult musical Little Shop of Horrors. The plant’s continual growth throughout the show has pizzazz, making the cast work hard to keep up with its outrageous antics (Audrey ll was created by the North Queensland Opera and Music Theatre and took a year to conceive and construct by Chris Ahern and Damien Jackson).

Stepping Out

By Richard Harris. Directed by Geoffrey Leeder. Koorliny Arts Centre, Kwinana, WA. Nov 10-25, 2017

This fabulous, joyful production is bursting with energy at the Koorliny Arts Centre. A wonderful collection of characters come to life, in a well-directed show with outstanding production values.

This well-known play centres around an adult tap dancing class, led by teacher Mavis (Hannah Harn - a wonderful choice for the role), who nurtures their talents. Koorliny’s incarnation of this show works particularly well because the characters are so expertly created, and the audience become invested in each and every one.

Flaws and All – The Musical

Music & Lyrics: Lucas D. Lynch. Book & Lyrics: Angela Monteagle. Angela Monteagle Production. Director/Choreographer: Maureen Bowra. Orchestrations & Musical Director: Lucas D. Lynch. Princess Theatre, Brisbane. 11 Nov 2017

Flaws and All – the Musical is a dichotomy – a new Australian musical played with American accents, yet there’s nothing intrinsically American about the concept – the unrealistic dating expectations of modern women. Conceived and written by 30-something marketing professional Angela Monteagle (who also wrote the lyrics), this vanity production comes direct from a season at the Adelaide Festival Fringe. All creatives are Brisbane based including the cast who have been culled from performers who usually work for Savoyards and Prima.

Roberto Devereux

By Gaetano Donizetti. Melbourne Opera. Director: Suzanne Chaundy. Musical Director: Greg Hocking. Athenaeum Theatre. November 11 – 18, 2017.

Donizetti’s opera Roberto Devereux is rarely performed, mainly due to the demanding soprano role. This was more than adequately met by local girl made good, Helena Dix, whose international career is on the rise.

A born comedienne, Helena presented a quirky Queen in the first act, with small movements being quite telling. Later she was quite furious when Roberto made it obvious she was no longer his main concern. Her pathos after his death was touching.

Leading Ladies

By Ken Ludwig. Mordialloc Theatre Company Inc. Shirley Burke Theatre, Parkdale. 10 – 25 Nov, 2017

Ken Ludwig’s American farce Leading Ladies is Mordialloc Theatre Company’s final season of the year.

Taking place over a month in the Spring of 1952, the plot revolves around two British actors in York, Pennsylvania who are down on their luck. After reading about a dying heiress who is searching for long-lost relatives from England, they decide to impersonate the men, only to frantically discover that the missing nephews… are actually nieces!

Playing the Palace

By June Walker Rogers. Hobart Repertory Theatre Company. Directed by Mark Morgan. Playhouse Theatre. November 3-18 2017

There are those who believe musical theatre should be vacuous and undemanding and then there are the rest of us. Yet, Playing the Palace is a flummery that makes significant demands of its audience. It requires an unusual degree of suspension of disbelief, principally, to accept that a play about a theatre is set on a stage partly dressed as a theatre. Ghosts are presaged by the augury of a flickering light and their presence accepted. Every line is a tenuous cue to a song and sometimes the songs just appear like the ghosts.

The 27 Club

The Basement (Sideshow). Arts Centre Gold Coast. 10th-11th November 2017, and touring.

Is it just synchronicity that five musical legends all died (mostly by their own hand) at the age of 27? Is that the age at which we have to own who we are and quit hiding behind the mask of being a “kid”? For some that transition to adulthood, seriousness, responsibility, is just too hard to make. On the ‘plus’ side, an early death brings a kind of immortality to performers who might otherwise have been swept up in the juggernaut of fame and ultimately replaced and forgotten.

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