Reviews

The Girl The Woman

By Aanisa Vylet. National Theatre of Parramatta. Riverside Theatres. June 28 – July 7, 2018

To say this production is a work of love would be to understate the concentration of experiences and diverse performance styles Aanisa Vylet has artistically fused “to smash the limitations of how female narratives can exist on stage”. Nor would it adequately explain the feeling of ‘family’ that radiates from the production.

Kiss Me, Kate

Music and lyrics by Cole Porter. Book by Sam and Bella Spewack Gold Coast Little Theatre, Southport. Director: Andrew Cockcroft-Penman. 30th June to 28th July, 2018

GCLT’s production of Kiss Me, Kate blends culture, class and Cole Porter’s memorable score into a great theatrical experience.

In this fresh approach, the director has assembled a talented cast and a basic, workable set complete with Shakespearian costumes in a predominately Black and White theme to convey the off-stage/on-stage battles of the previously married leading lady and leading man with hilarious results.

Baby Bi Bi Bi

Created & performed by Erin Pattison, Samantha Andrew & Annabel Larcombe. A Flesh Coloured Panties Production. Melbourne Cabaret Festival. Chapel off Chapel, Prahran, VIC. 30 June & 1 July (only) 2018

The ‘Bi’, in case you’re wondering, means bi-sexual. That is what this show is about.  It’s explicit, graphic (verbally anyway) and not afraid to send itself up.  It’s a show delivered with such panache, such humour, charm and polish by three very talented women that it overcomes any resistance that might still be out there (in fact, that is its serious purpose), is hugely enjoyable and my audience – gay or straight – had a thoroughly good time.

Carrion

Justin Shoulder. Arts House, North Melbourne. June 27 – 30, 2018.

Carrion is a mesmerizing new solo show by Justin Shoulder. It is a challenging  performance combining dance, music, multi media and modern sculptural practice.

Justin Shoulder is a multi–disciplinary artist who develops work around alter- personas, queer ancestral myths and migration. Carrion is an evolutionary extension that has beckoned its own life from his two earlier shows, also combining masks, costume, and gestural language.

Lucia di Lammermoor

Opera by Gaetano Donizetti. Libretto by Savlatore Cammarano/ After Sir Walter Scott’s novel The Bride of Lammermoore. Opera Australia. Joan Sutherland Theatre, Sydney Opera House. June 28 – July 27, 2018.

This opera is famous for launching the career of Dame Joan Sutherland into the stratosphere. The frenzied ovation on opening night had an intensity which brought back memories of La Stupenda.

Jessica Pratt was towering and terrifying as the insane Lucia. Her top notes could almost crack glass.  Driven to murder on her wedding night she enters the stage covered in blood. In a giddy night of highlights her duetto with a flute, at the height of her madness, was the most sublime moment of the evening as her voice and the instrument echoed then melted into each other.

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

By Simon Stephens. The National Theatre of Great Britain. Directed by Marianne Elliott. Canberra Theatre, 27 June – 1 July 2018, and touring nationally.

The National Theatre of Great Britain’s production of Simon Stephens’s play The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time reflects very well the tenor of Mark Haddon’s very popular 2003 novel, admirably translating to live theatre the novel’s depiction of the inner world of the play’s young protagonist, Christopher.  The play succeeds in adding nuances impossible in book form, and in fact is sprinkled throughout with delightful surprises, including circular references to writing the book and turning it into a play.

Out of the Box Festival

Duck, World Premiere created by the Out of the Box Festival, Cremorne Theatre, QPAC, Brisbane, June 26-July 1, 2018 and The Arrival, Red Leap Theatre Company, Playhouse Theatre, QPAC, June 26-July 7, 2018

Shoes belong in boxes. Children don’t. Building a theatre festival specifically for children requires looking beyond the stereotypes and traditional theatrical devices. With characters in Duck and The Arrival taking to the stage without shoes, the early indication is that the box has its rightful occupant.

White Hat Hackers

An Ella Filar and Krows Bar Kabaret Production. Performed by Greg Fryer, Linda Cookson, Joanna Millet, Anthony Winnick & Chris Molyneux. La Mama Courthouse, Carlton, VIC. 26 June – 1 July 2018

Billed as the story of a ‘self-confessed Internet addict… [who] stumbles on Krows Bar Kabaret – a special branch of the wildly subversive White Hat Hackers’, this black comedy cabaret show satirises our contemporary obsessions with on-line stuff and how it can take over our lives. 

Don’t Monkey With Broadway

Patti Lupone with Joseph Thalken (Piano) & QCGU Choir. QPAC, Queensland Conservatorium Griffith University. Conservatorium Theatre, Southbank. Brisbane, 27 June 2018

Patti LuPone is a Broadway legend. In a spectacular career that has seen her win two Tony Awards and been nominated for another five, there has rarely been a theatre season on Broadway since she starred as Evita in 1979 when she hasn’t appeared in a musical or play. This new show, which originated in her hometown of Newport, Long Island, is a career run-down with a difference as she sings songs from shows that influenced her, songs that were originally sung by other characters, and of course songs from her hit shows.

Unqualified

By Genevieve Hegney and Catherine Moore. Ensemble Theatre, Sydney. Director: Janine Watson. 22 June – 21 July 2018

Before an over-insistent backdrop of Casual Jobs advertisements (‘Must be willing to wear coconut shells’) and on the setting for another play (Marjorie Prime), come two 30-something female actors with something to say. Between raising young families and all the stresses of feeding acting careers, Genevieve Hegney and Catherine Moore have snatched the time to write and perform Unqualified, the story of two women who start a temp agency with no extra employees. They’re on to a winner.

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