Reviews

And Then She Became a Chair

Created & performed by Michelle Myers. Theatre Works Glasshouse, St Kilda. 3 – 16 January 2021

Michelle Myer leaves a message for the audience on the little tables in each of Theatre Works Glasshouse Perspex booths: ‘this show is about my mother dying of cancer thanks, Michelle xx’  This gives us something to hang onto in what follows.  But, of course, it also betrays an anxiety that maybe we won’t ‘get it’. 

The Shape of Things

By Neil LaBute. Lambert House Enterprises. Flight Path Theatre, Marrickville. January 8 – 31, 2021.

LaBute’s play, written in 2001, has lost none of its astute ability to manipulate the audience. Nor does it lose the power of its final, disturbing scenes. LaBute craftily beguiles the audience with what appears to be a love story, albeit one that appears to condone the power of one person to hurt another in the name of art. In doing so, he raises such issues as the real nature of romance, friendship, personal identity, body image, honesty in relationships – and just what can be called ‘art’.

Sunshine Super Girl

Written and directed by Andrea James. Performing Lines and Sydney Festival Sydney Town Hall. January 8 – 17, 2021

This was a magical night in the theatre, fusing an extraordinary Australian story with beautiful stagecraft.

At its core is the spirit of Evonne Goolagong, and her transformation from a seven-year-old Aboriginal girl peering longingly onto a tennis court, with not enough money for a racquet or sandshoes, into a world champion.

The set (what an apt word) for the production was (naturally) a tennis court.Members of the audience were on either side in the grandstands.

Magic Mike Live

The Arcadia, the showring, Entertainment Quarter, Moore Park. Sydney season resumed January 2021. Melbourne from June 2021

Welcome to the latest raunchy male show made for hen nights.

So move over those old Chippendales.  Touring Australia in its own Spiegeltent, Magic Mike Live sports 16 gym perfect American boys speeding through a kaleidoscope of dance styles, but all hip thrusting and humping, an endless sea of swivel snake spines and floor-nicating.  And coaxed by our girl-next-door MC Amy Ingham, still the hens cry for more.

The Love of the Nightingale

By Timberlake Wertenbaker. Produced & directed by Simran Giria. Theatre Works Glasshouse, St Kilda. 5 – 9 January 2021

Based on the Greek myth of Philomela, the abused and silenced princess who metamorphosed into a nightingale (according to Ovid), The Love of the Nightingale is Timberlake Wertenbaker’s take on this eternal story.  It has been adapted and referenced over and over, including by Shakespeare and Keats, and in our time by Margaret Atwood.  Wertenbaker’s version was first performed in 1988 and yet it is still ‘relevant’, it still reverberates, because it is about silence – the silence that precedes and allows abuse, and the silence that follows &nd

The Last Season

Text by Tom Wright. Music by Kelly Ryall. Choreography by Danielle Micich. Force Majeure / Sydney Festival. Carriageworks. Jan 6 – 10, 2021.

It’s a tough call making a show with kids about the world’s environmental collapse, but Force Majeure has an impressive record of working with non-dancers representative of different communities and current issues.

With the so-called Youth Company, the dance theatre troupe here re-constructs Vivaldi’s optimistic Four Seasons cycle into the last gasp of The Last Season – not that you hear Vivaldi’s symphony, or would even get the connection without being told.

Future Remains

Diary of One Who Disappeared by Leoš Janáček, with a new libretto by Pierce Wilcox & Fumeblind Oracle - Composer Huw Belling and lyricist Pierce Wilcox. Sydney Chamber Opera. Sydney Festival. Carriageworks. Jan 6 – 10, 2021

In this its seventh Sydney Festival show, Sydney Chamber Opera offers a dramatic and provocative counterbalance of two works.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

By William Shakespeare. Presented by The Australian Shakespeare Company. Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, Melbourne Gardens, Southern Cross Lawn, 100 Birdwood Avenue, South Yarra. 18 December 2020 - 24 January 2021.

This is a highly energetic and entertaining performance of Shakespeare’s magical comedy, A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The Australian Shakespeare Company takes a very traditional approach to the play, incorporating some contemporary elements that preserve all the original features but make the play highly accessible, helping to accentuate the comedy. The staging of the production is truly remarkable and allows for a level of grandeur and spectacular effects not usually associated or feasible in an outdoor setting. 

Ring, Ring!

Written & directed by Ebony Rattle & Ellen Wiltshire. Virtual Waiting Room. Theatre Works Glasshouse’s Fringe Replanted. Theatre Works, St Kilda. 5 – 9 January 2021

Set in 1963, the central question posed in Ring, Ring! appears to be ‘What is Truth?’  The play begins with a death – a murder?

The Merry Widow

Music: Franz Lehar. Libretto: Viktor Leon and Leo Stein. Translation: Justin Fleming. Opera Australia. Direction & Choreography: Graeme Murphy; Conductor: Brian Castles-Onion. Joan Sutherland Theatre, Sydney Opera House. 5 - 16 January 2021.

If ever there was an argument about how essential the Arts are in the time of Covid, then look no further than OA’s elegant and fun production of The Merry Widow. On the practical side I’d suggest that such productions keep in gainful employment far more people than sporting events, and therefore are better for the economy.

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