Reviews

Anatomy of a Suicide

By Alice Birch. Sugary Rum Productions, Chopt Logic and Seymour Centre. Directed by Shane Anthony. Reginald Theatre at the Seymour Centre, Sydney. 6th – 29th October 2022

There are three leading women in Alice Birch’s amazing play - Carol, Anna and Bonnie - and we learn pretty soon that they are related: mother, daughter and granddaughter. Thanks to a brilliant setting, they co-exist in three different time zones and we follow key events in their lives simultaneously.

Alice Birch brings complete authority to this scrambled time zone, and we pick and make sense of it all.

Lucky Stiff

By Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty. Primadonna Productions. Directed by Carole Dhu. The Fishtrap Theatre, Mandurah Performing Arts Centre, WA. Oct 7-9, 2022

Primadonna Productions’ Lucky Stiff, is, as per its subtitle, “a Dead Funny Musical”. In possibly the WA premiere of this manic little musical, eleven actors work their socks off to present a pacey show that delights its audience and has laughs at every corner.

After All This

By Marcel Dorney. Rumpus Theatre, Bowden. 4-16 October 2022

Image: Caitlin Ellen Moore (Producer) and Nate Troisi (Director).

All That Fall

By Samuel Beckett. Directed by Melanie Beddie. La Mama HQ. 5-16 October, 2022

All That Fall was written by Samuel Beckett as a radio play. The director, Melanie Beddie, has neatly woven together Beckett’s words, excellent ensemble acting, the physical presence of artisan ‘foley’ sound effects, and a few simple props to stay true to its origin.

Hostage

By Cerise Gelder. Melbourne Writers’ Festival. Directed by Elizabeth Walley. Gasworks Art Park. 4- 8 October, 2022

Cerise Gelder places her five strongly drawn characters into the pressured situation of being held hostage during a bank robbery with the threat of imminent death to explore relationships, personal intersections and the secrets which can be lived with but are of such importance they need to be revealed before death.

Each character faces their fears, shares their secrets, finds the importance of the others and, until there are just two left, is taken off to face death. The final two engage the robbers and capture one. This leads to the final denouement with a semi-happy ending.

Kinky Boots

North Queensland Opera and Music Theatre. Book by Harvey Fierstein. Music by Cyndi Lauper. Based on the Miramax Motion Picture Kinky Boots. Directed by Michelle Higgins. Vocal Direction Tony Woodhouse. Choreography by Lynda Tama. Music Direction Mark Smith. Townsville Civic Theatre. 5-15 October 2022.

IT WAS third time lucky for this production to finally open at the Townsville Civic Theatre. The floods of 2019 forced the cancellation of the original production and just one week before it was due to open in 2020, COVID forced the second production to be postponed indefinitely.

Everyman & His Dog

By Ron Elisha. Theatre Works, Explosives Factory, St Kilda. 5 – 8 October 2022

This is the story of a man who is given a dog.  That is to say, a somewhat curmudgeonly man who has a dog foisted upon him.  For his own good, of course.  He has never liked dogs, due in part to certain stinking childhood experiences.  He can’t accept ‘owning’ a living creature, and so he can’t bring himself to name it.  He calls it ‘Dog’.  

Afterplay

By Brian Friel. Directed by Kirsten von Bibra. La Mama HQ 205 Faraday Street, Carlton. 5-16 October 2022.

Lovers of Chekhov characters will delight in Friel’s 2002 exploration of two key personas from his canonical works. Sonya Serebriakova (Uncle Vanya,1897) and Andrey Prozorov (Three Sisters,1900). The play imagines them in a much later stage of life and focuses on their interaction after a chance encounter in a Moscow café.

The Comedy of Errors

By William Shakespeare. Bell Shakespeare. Director: Janine Watson. Canberra Playhouse, Canberra Theatre Centre. 1–8 October, 2022.

This production is a delightful re-imagining of Shakespeare’s early comedy, now placed in a sunny 1970s disco era, with natural voices, bright colours, and simple but imaginative staging.

Antipholus of Syracuse (Skyler Ellis) and Antipholus of Ephesus (Felix Jozeps) contrast with their  servants, Dromio of Syracuse (Julia Billington) and Dromio of Ephesus (Ella Prince), each playing up similarities and differences.

The Normal Heart

By Larry Kramer. State Theatre Company South Australia. Dunstan Playhouse, Adelaide Festival Centre. 30 September to 15 October 2022

The State Theatre Company South Australia’s production of Larry Kramer’s 1985 autobiographical drama, The Normal Heart, is a complete triumph. Directed by Dean Bryant, designed by Jeremy Allen, with lighting by Nigel Livings, sound by Andrew Howard, original music by Hilary Kleinig, and an exceptional cast of actors, this production, whilst honouring and respecting the original, breathes new life into this powerful play.

Subscribe to our E-Newsletter, buy our latest print edition or find a Performing Arts book at Book Nook.