Reviews

Once Upon A Mattress

Music by Mary Rodgers, lyrics by Marshall Barer, and book by Jay Thompson, Dean Fuller, and Marshall Barer. Primadonna Productions. Directed by Carole Dhu. Mandurah Performing Arts Centre, WA. Jan 11-14, 2018

Once Upon A Mattress kicks off Western Australia’s Community Theatre year with a joyful, celebratory, production with great colour, good laughs and a lovely energy, from Primadonna Productions.

A cast of twenty-five (it feels like more), work well as an ensemble to tell the ‘true’ story of The Princess and the Pea. They are supported by a four-piece band. The group numbers sound great under the musical direction of Bruce Angus.

Roald Dahl’s The Twits

Directed by Michael Barlow. Spare Parts Puppet Theatre, Fremantle, WA. Jan 8-27, 2018

Spare Parts Puppet Theatre’s World Premiere of Roald Dahl’s The Twits is exactly what you would hope for in an adaptation of Roald Dahl’s work; a fun filled, silly but clever romp, with lots of laughs.

Co-created by Michael Barlow and Humphrey Barlow, it takes the essence of the novel and creates a fun puppet led production. Suitable for children from about 5 upwards, it is a wonderful introduction to the novel and will be enjoyed by Roald Dahl fans of any age.

The Taming of the Shrew

By William Shakespeare. Butterfly Theatre – Shakespeare at the Pub. The Wheatsheaf Hotel (SA). January 9 – 17, 2018

Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew is today regarded by some as a ‘problem play’. This is primarily due to the influence of contemporary ‘feminism’ concerning the overt misogyny in the play. The play has been re-interpreted in numerous ways, and even though it may not be performed as often as in previous times, nonetheless, it still has the ability to enthrall and entertain. This is very apparent with Butterfly Theatre’s current delightful production.

Alice in Wonderland

Adapted & directed by Penny Farrow, based on Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll. Rapidfire International, Inc. in association with Boyd Productions. Athenaeum Theatre, Collins Street, Melbourne. 9 – 10 January 2018

Alice on stage?  But, no, its not a musical.  Executive Producer Ethan Walker believes, ‘the original book is so delicious and remarkable that… the words would be lost if we were to make this production a musical’. So, here is an exuberant, pacey compression (just one hour) of Carroll’s work with additional material chosen by adapter/director Penny Farrow from Alice Through the Looking-Glass, The Hunting of the Snark and a volume of Carroll’s poetry, Rhyme? And Reason?

Darlinghurst Nights

Book by Katherine Thomson. Music by Max Lambert. Based on the book Darlinghurst Nights by Kenneth Slessor and an original concept by Andrew James. Directed by Lee Lewis. Musical Director Max Lambert. Hayes Theatre Co. Jan 4 to Feb 3, 2018.

This musical gem beautifully evokes the ghosts of those who once walked the streets of Darlinghurst and Kings Cross just outside the Hayes Theatre itself.  Drawing on Kenneth Slessor’s collection of poems from the 1920-30’s, it’s also another welcome time travel –  reviving as it does an Australian musical successfully premiered 30 years ago.

We’re reminded again about the power onstage of our own Australian voices, the locals which came before us and familiar places which made us both.

The Town Hall Affair

Based on the film Town Bloody Hall by Chris Hegedus & D.A. Pennebaker. Wooster Group / Sydney Festival. Drama Theatre, Sydney Opera House. January 7 – 13, 2018.

New York’s Wooster Group were the experimental darlings of the 1986 Adelaide Festival, along with the long monologues of their co-founder, the late Spalding Gray.

Now Wooster debuts in Sydney, still sitting at the same long table with mics, deconstructing classic texts and major cultural events. 

Their subject is the landmark 1971 Manhattan debate on women’s liberation, which was documented in the film, Town Bloody Hall. Extracts are screened as the Wooster actors play out the same sequences at the table and lectern. 

Masterclass

By Terrence McNally. Andrew Kay in Association with The Kings Head Theatre, London. Director: Adam Spreadbury-Maher. Southbank Theatre, Melbourne. January 5 – 27, 2018.

Masterclass depicts scenes from a masterclass given by the great opera diva, Maria Callas, at the Juilliard School of Music in 1971. Apart from Callas we meet only three students and an accompanist.

This is a tour de force for the leading lady, as Callas is on the stage for the entire play, and Amanda Muggleton was superb. Only metres from the audience, she never dropped character and alternatively showed the strength and vulnerability of this operatic icon. She was riveting.

Dream Lover

Music & Lyrics: Bobby Darin & Others. Concept & Book: John Michael Howson & Frank Howson. Additional material by Simon Phillips & Carolyn Burns. John Frost & Gilbert Theatrical. Director: Simon Phillips. Choreographer: Andrew Hallsworth. Musical Director: Richard Montgomery. State Theatre, Arts Centre, Melbourne 31 Dec 2017 until 4 Mar, 2018.

David Campbell is giving a gold standard Broadway performance in Dream Lover, the new jukebox musical based on the life of Bobby Darin. The young, good-looking performer plays the 50s and 60s pop-crooner with buckets of charm and charisma. Rarely off-stage he’s simply a powerhouse delivering show-stopping vocals of Darin’s songbook that embrace everything from “Mack the Knife” to “Splish Splash”, and the title tune.

Serenading Adela, A Street Opera

Artistic Director, Jeannie Marsh. Centenary Performance, Pentridge Piazza, 1 Champ street Coburg. 7th January, 2018.

On 7 January 1918 supporters of Adela Pankhurst’s WWI anti-conscription cause gathered outside the bluestone walls of the women’s prison at Pentridge to serenade her with socialist songs, cooees, and coloured lights. Adela, who was exiled to Australia when she fell out of favour with her famous UK suffragette family, had been imprisoned for her energetic anti-war campaigning.

Tree of Codes

Wayne McGregor, Olafur Eliasson and Jamie xx. Sydney Festival / Studio Wayne McGregor and Manchester International Festival. Darling Harbour Theatre. January 6 – 10, 2018.

The kaleidoscopic impact of London wunderkind Wayne McGregor’s dance epic Tree of Codes even fills the cavernous theatre space in Sydney’s new International Convention Centre.  It comes to the Sydney Festival from Melbourne’s last October.

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