Reviews

The Screwtape Letters

By C. S. Lewis. Adaptation by Hailey McQueen. Clock & Spiel Productions. Bakehouse Theatre (SA). April 18 – 22, 2017

C. S. Lewis’ The Screwtape Letters is an exchange between two Demons, uncle and nephew, about the best way to corrupt a man’s soul. Possession of the soul is a common theme in the works of C. S. Lewis, including The Narnia Chronicles.

Clock & Spiel Productions’ adaptation, written and directed by Hailey McQueen, is delightful – if at times a little confusing.

Normal Human Responses

Dairy Kweenz. Speakeasy HQ. Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2017. April 20 – 22, 2017

The beauty of the Melbourne International Comedy Festival is you don’t know what you’re getting until you arrive.

Going in blind, I was expecting to see stand-up comedy. Instead, I got a comedy troupe doing something fun. Something absurd.

Two elements make up Normal Human Responses.

The first of these is the through line: a researcher (Taylor Griffiths) is conducting research into normal human responses to emotional stimuli.

Spring Awakening

Book and Lyrics by Steven Sater, Music by Duncan Sheik. Based on the German Play 'Spring Awakening' (1891) by Frank Wederkind. Barn Door Productions. Directed by Leisi Edmonds. Musical Direction by Andrew Swan. Laycock Street Theatre, Don Craig Room. April 21-May 6, 2017. 

This reviewer has long been of the opinion that you cannot throw a rock anywhere in the NSW Central Coast without hitting a gifted young musician or musical theatre performer, so it was only a matter of time before someone on “Sydney's Far North Shore” (*patent pending) took the risk of forming a professional co-op theatre company to give the flood of youth talent somewhere to...um, flow. Last year, managing partners of The Nate Butler Studio: Nate Butler and Leisi Edmonds teamed with Toddy Keys and Nathan Dale to form Barn Door Productions.

Kinky Boots

Book by Harvey Fierstein. Music and Lyrics by Cyndi Lauper. Based on the motion picture Kinky Boots, written by Geoff Deane and Tim Firth. Capitol Theatre, Sydney. Opening night – April 19, 2017.

With funky pink hair, Cyndi Lauper slipped into the theatre as opening night guest of honour, earning an impromptu ovation during the interval. The fact that she came from the US to the second city opening in Australia reflected the pop diva’s enthusiasm for her new career as a music theatre composer.

Her talent and down to earth hard work was reflected on the stage. Kinky Boots is a beautifully crafted musical, with lots of laughs and loads of heart.

Wicked The Untold Story of the Witches of Oz

Music & Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz. Book by Winnie Holzman. Based upon the novel by Gregory Maguire. Shane Davidson Presents. Walford Anglican School Theatre (SA). April 19-23, 2017.

To this veteran ‘Wicked-watcher’, who has seen the production six times over the years, the prospect of an amateur version with mainly youth, was a challenge. How would a traditionally ‘adult’ show work in this format?

Diary of a Wombat

Based on the book by Jackie French and Bruce Whatley. Monkey Baa Theatre Company. Lend Lease Darling Quarter Theatre. April 18 – 24, 2017

Monkey Baa’s adaptation of Jackie French’s first book about Mothball the wombat is true to Bruce Whatley’s vivid illustrations depicting a week in the life of this endearing but mischievous mammal who spends the days sleeping, eating, sleeping, scratching, sleeping … and finding as many ways as are possible to annoy the family whose garden she has chosen to make her home.

13 The Musical

Music and Lyrics by Jason Robert Brown. Book by Dan Elish. Jopuka Productions Inc. Directed by Joshua Maxwell, Musical director Quinn Carter and Choreography by Nicole Seggie. The Art House, Wyong. April 15-21, 2017

As the title suggests, this relatively little-known show celebrates/commiserates that most painful rite of passage – turning 13. At the time of it's Off Off Broadway (Californian) Debut in 2007, 13 was the only musical ever to have a full cast and band made up of teenagers. Making it's Broadway debut over a year later – it closed after a less than a year – but remained a cult hit among die-hard fans and has been revised and 'revived' at various times in scattered capital cities ever since.

The Book of Everything

Adapted by Richard Tulloch from the novel by Gus Kuijer. Caste Hill Players. The Pavilion Theatre. Mar 31 to April 22, 2017

When I first saw this joyous, quirky little play at Belvoir a few years back, I was absolutely charmed. Despite it’s dark themes of domestic violence and religious hypocrisy, I was totally swept up by its whimsical, optimistic sense of hope. It’s a wonderful uplifting Australian stage adaptation of a Dutch novel by Gus Kuijer,

Similar feelings washed over me again at the Pavilion Theatre watching Carol Wimmer’s production for the Castle Hill Players.

Dracula: Last Voyage of the Demeter

By Sean Carney. Bitten By Productions. Club Voltaire 14 Raglan St, North Melbourne. April 12 – 22, 2017.

In Bram Stoker’s Dracula there is a brief mentione of Dracula travelling by ship to England. Writer Sean Carney has chosen to imagine what occurred on that fateful trip and has created an eerie tale that is confidently presented.

We are below deck in a cargo area where the Captain of the good ship Demeter is guarding Dracula, who has been captured, chained and caged. The ship is becalmed and an unrelenting fog descends, causing crew and passengers to become unsettled.

Table 17

Written and Directed by Phillip A Mayer. Here There & Everywhere Theatre Company. Melbourne International Comedy Festival. Southbank Theatre, The Lawler. April 19 – 22, 2017

When going to a family wedding you know the relatives to avoid and who is going to cause embarrassment. In Table 17, Phillip. A. Mayer has drawn on his experience as an MC and guest at many weddings to create a one act play featuring a stock cast of guests thrown together at the back table of a wedding. 

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