Reviews

Barracking for the Umpire

By Andrea Gibbs. Black Swan State Theatre Company of WA. Directed by Clare Watson. Subiaco Arts Centre, WA. Oct 7-23, 2022

The World Premiere of Barracking for the Umpire is a moving but funny production about football and family. Touching on a number of serious issues, this first play by Andrea Gibbs is relatable and quintessentially Australian and would be the perfect play to introduce your footy loving friends to theatre - because they will love it.

Ignis

By Daniel Nellor, based on Arthur Schnitzler’s La Ronde. Anthropocene Play Company. October 10 – 23, 2022.

Ignis is the intriguing new show by the ensemble team at Anthropocene Play Company, directed by Bronwen Coleman and written/adapted by Daniel Nellor.

Based on Arthur Schnitzler’s provocative play La Ronde (Round Dance) written in 1897, banned at the time for indecency and for its provocative sexual themes, Nellor has successfully re-written an original dramatic text, set around the southern NSW bushfires in 2019/20, utilising the landscape to explore anxieties, sexual tensions, betrayals, and political cover ups.

Bloody Murder

By Ed Sala. Pymble Players, NSW. October 5 – 30, 2022.

Characters are literally dropping like flies in the Pymble Players latest production, Bloody Murder.   Only six actors bring to life a vast array of characters as the murder-mystery-comedy twists and turns like an unpredictable roller coaster.

Canary

Written & performed by Isabella Perversi. Melbourne Fringe Festival. Trades Hall, Music Room. 15 - 23 October 2022

Isabella Perversi tells her tale at breakneck speed - as if she (or her character) is in a constant state of incredulous amazement.  ‘This can’t be happening… I can’t believe… ‘  She’s forever the fish out of water, uncertain, struggling to keep up.

The Grand Duke

By Gilbert and Sullivan. The Gilbert & Sullivan Society of WA. Directed by Paul Treasure. The Dolphin Theatre, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, WA. Oct 13-22, 2022

The Grand Duke is somewhat of a white elephant in the Gilbert and Sullivan canon, and is rarely performed, even by G&S societies (this may well be only the fourth production ever in WA in 125 years). Despite its convoluted and complex plot, it does have some lovely songs and the fact it is a show about actors, will add some extra fun for many theatre fans.

The Boys

By Gordon Graham. PIP Theatre, Brisbane. 4 to 22 October 2022

Brisbane’s newest theatre company, PIP Theatre, has their raison d’etre embedded in their name: Purpose in Performance. They choose plays with a social conscience and they work with local community groups. In the case of Gordon Graham’s The Boys, it’s charity Micah Projects who run the Brisbane Domestic Violence Service. In his award-winning play, Graham does not glorify violence – and there is very little on the stage.

The Vicar of Dibley

Adapted by Ian Gower and Paul Carpenter from the TV series by Richard Curtis and Paul Mayhew-Archer. Tea Tree Players. Tea Tree Players Theatre, Surrey Downs, SA. Oct 12 – 22, 2022

Tea Tree Players have backed a winner presenting The Vicar of Dibley. The season was sold out well before the first night!

The play sits nicely in a cosy community theatre, giving the feeling that you are right there in the Parish Hall with Geraldine and her parishioners.

9 To 5 The Musical

Music and lyrics by Dolly Parton, book by Patricia Resnick. Festival Theatre, Adelaide. 8 October to 5 November 2022

This is an unapologetically bold and brash story about three women employed in an office who take revenge – accidentally, at first – on the narcissistic misogynist that is their boss. Based on the 1980 movie of the same name, the supposedly feminist outcomes come too late and too light to have any real meaning, drowned in the dazzle of lights, costume, and the music of Dolly Parton.

Jack Absolute Flies Again

National Theatre Production. In cinemas nationally from October 15, 2022

Jack Absolute Flies Again springs from the pens of Richard Bean and Oliver Chris of One Man, Two Guvnors fame, who have taken Sheridan’s comedy of manners The Rivals as their inspiration and reset it during WWII. Directed by Emily Burns, the play takes place at Malaprop Mansions, temporarily housing a Second World War RAF office and unseen plane field.

Bat Lake

Form Dance Projects. Choreographer: Eliza Cooper. Riverside Theatres. 13 -15 October, 2022

“The rustle of leaves, the bustle of busy creatures … A cloud of bats, flickering at dusk …”.

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