Reviews

sixbythree

A festival of six dance works by three choreographers. FORM Dance Projects. Riverside Theatres Parramatta. 6-7 July, 2024

Image above from Epilogue. Photo by Yo.

sixbythree brings the rare opportunity to see how three different choreographers interpret the world in contemporary dance. Serious issues, unusual imaginings, personal reactions are told in dance stories that are contained and controlled in movement and rhythm and time. Five of the six performances are described below.

Photographer: Anne Moffatt.

Let’s Murder Marsha

By Monk Ferris. Directed by David Walpole Sinnamon. Townsville Little Theatre. Denise Glasgow Performing Arts Centre, Pimlico State High School, Townsville. 3 – 6 July 2024.

THE PLAYING of farce is a difficult thing – many community theatre companies think it is an easy programme choice. It is anything but. 

Farce requires much precision and the director needs to be aware of – amongst other things - the requisite physical comedy, comic timing and discipline. The actors need to create strong characterisations and be able to perform in a credible larger-than-life way as the absurdities of the plot unfold.

And to do this it can be boiled down to what I term the “ABCDEF” (or alphabet) of farce:-

The Long Game

By Sally Faraday. Glieson-Faraday Productions & Theatre Works. Theatre Works, Explosives Factory, Inkerman Street, St Kilda. 28 June – 13 July 2024

Sally Faraday wants her play to ask questions – big questions – and throw it to the audience to think about the answers.  Fair enough.  Isn’t that what Chekhov said?  The questions The Long Game seems to ask are sadly perennial.  Why do sexism and misogyny persist?  Why does sexual violence persist?  In the patriarchy, how does a woman get to the top?  And what are the consequences when she does?  Why do some ‘realistic’ women go along with this because it’s just the way the world is?

Il Trittico

By Puccini. Opera Australia. Joan Sutherland Theatre, Sydney Opera House. July 4 – 19, 2024

Short and pithy they may be, but these three Puccini operas remind us how sophisticated this master of storytelling is in aligning musical combinations with so many quick details of plot, theme and rich character.  

Hare Brain

By Aesop and Justin Cheek. Spare Parts Puppet Theatre. Directed by Philip Mitchell. The Ellie Eaton Theatre, Gate One, Claremont Showground, WA. Jun 29 - Jul13, 2024

Spare Parts Puppet Theatre's Hare Brain – A Twisted Spin on Aesop’s The Tortoise and the Hare, is about to open for a school holiday season at Claremont Showgrounds. A fast, frenetic, and fantastical production drawn from Aesop’s fable, it had youngsters screaming advice and giggling throughout its evening premiere and press night this week.

Beauty and the Beast

Music by Alan Menken. Lyrics by Howard Ashman & Tim Rice. Book by Linda Woolverton. Disney Theatrical Group. Her Majesty’s Theatre, Melbourne. Opening Night June 29, 2024. Tickets currently selling through to November 24..

The fairy tale of the Beauty and the Beast is timeless.  It can only be because it embodies enduring themes and archetypes.  Transformations are possible, it tells us.  Appearances can be deceptive.  And, of course, Love Conquers All.  The basic story has gone through many transformations: it’s been abridged, rewritten and adapted many, many times as fiction, film (most famously by Cocteau in 1946), television and theatre.

Puccini: The Butterfly Effect

By Vanessa West with Angus Grant. Presented by Maleny Arts Council. Maleny Community Centre. 30 June, 2024.

Art imitates real life in an exploration of the lovers who suffered for the superstar of 19th-century Italian opera, Giacomo Puccini.

It is no secret that major opera composer, Giacomo Puccini, “had his cigar in many ashtrays”, as one heartbroken lover puts it in this two-hander that delves into the women behind the man behind the tragediennes.

The Odd Couple

By Neil Simon. John Frost for Crossroads Live. Directed by Mark Kilmurry. Theatre Royal Sydney. June 30 - July 28, 2024

The Odd Couple is as sharp, insightful and humorous as when it first lit up Broadway and sparkles with this excellent cast.

The play opens in the living room of a fancy fashionable eight-room apartment in New York City, that is incongruously in a state of disorder for a poker game hosted by slothful sports journalist Oscar Madison (Shane Jacobson). The wise cracking players fire off each other, with one observing that the milk is standing in Madison’s fridge without a bottle.

Disney Frozen Jr.

By Kristen Anderson-Lopez, Robert Lopez, and Jennifer Lee. The Production Academy. Directed by Dixie Farinosi Marist Auditorium, Newman College, Churchlands, WA, Jun 29 – Jul 6, 2024

Frozen Jr., presented by The Production Academy, was this reviewer’s third Disney Jr in eight days, and is further proof that the future of Musical Theatre in WA looks very bright. This beautiful looking show has a big-budget feel, which is backed by excellent performances from its young cast.

The Addams Family

By Marshall Brickman, Rick Elice and Andrew Lippa based on the characters by Charles Addams. Directed by Michelle Ezzy. Roleystone Theatre, WA. Jun 28 – Jul 13, 2024

Roleystone Theatre’s second production in their new theatre, and they are clearly now feeling at home, with this well-polished, thoughtfully directed, and expertly performed production of The Addams Family

A striking, multilevel set designed by Peter “Pear” Carr nicely evokes the Addams’ family home, lit with appropriate eeriness from a design by Keely Johnson. Costumes, designed by Jo Padgett are picture perfect and lifted further by Yvette Drager-Wetherilt’s superb makeup and wig design.

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