Reviews

Cyrano

By Virginia Gay after Edmond Rostand. Directed by Sarah Goodes. Melbourne Theatre Company. Southbank Theatre, The Sumner. 24 September – 29 October 2022

On stage we see another stage - bare, shabby, empty.  There’s a single work light, trunks, old flats.  Old fashioned footlights.  Oh.  Isn’t this Cyrano de Bergerac?  We know there may be one or two changes, but it’s set in a theatre?  Yes, it is – because just one of the things this very original adaptation is about, is theatre itself. 

Your Song

The Little Red Company. Concert Hall, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), Brisbane. 30 September to 1 October 2022

Your Song is a moving and breathtaking reminder of the power of music as a soundtrack to our lives. The award-winning show was put together by Adam Brunes and Naomi Price, creators at Brisbane’s busy and versatile The Little Red Company. Naomi also directs.

Priscilla Queen of the Desert: The Musical

By Allan Scott and Stephan Elliott. The Regals Musical Society. Rockdale Town Hall. September 30 – October 9, 2022.

The Regals Musical Society burst on stage last night with all of the colour, energy and pizazz required to bring Priscilla to life.  Right from the first note, the audience was tapping their feet and dancing in their seats.  Charles Wilkinson led a very tight orchestra and the overture set a high expectation of the quality of what was to follow.

Boublil & Schönberg’s Do You Hear the People Sing?

Produced by Enda Markey. Concert Hall, Sydney Opera House. September 30 - October 2, 2022

The audience gathered like disciples in a cathedral to celebrate and drink in the music and lyrics of Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil.

To my surprise and delight the dynamic duo were seated right next to me in the stalls of the newly renovated Concert Hall of the Sydney Opera House. (Yes, I got a selfie.)

The Lifespan of a Fact

By Jeremy Kareken & David Murrell and Gordon Farrell. Sydney Theatre Company. Roslyn Packer Theatre. Sep 20 – Oct 22, 2022

In these post-truth times, as we’re blinded by fake news, digital gossip and political lies, The Lifespan of a Fact promises to be topical, even urgent.  

And the story is true. Honestly!

Real-life American writer John D’Agata penned an essay around the leap to his death by teenager Levi Presley in 2002. Now the editor of a prestigious New York magazine urgently wants it as her cover story, but first she needs it fact checked.

Puberty Blues

By Zoe Muller, from the novel by Kathy Lette and Gabrielle Carey. Deadset Theatre Company. The Studio: Holden Street Theatres. 28th Sep-2 Oct 2022

Based on the novel by Kathy Lette and Gabrielle Carey, and adapted for the stage by Zoe Muller in 2017, Deadset Theatre’s production of the iconic Puberty Blues is an example, particularly for older performers, writers and theatre companies, of the powerful energy and authenticity that young people can bring to quality theatre.

We Live Here

By Robert Kronk. Directed by Bridget Boyle and Natono Fa’anana. Flipside Circus. Studio Underground, State Theatre Centre of WA. Sep 27-30, 2022

We Live Here is a clever and impressive circus show with a difference, that celebrates the memories and moments that make up a life.

The Whale’s Tale

Presented by Born in a Taxi. Hackett Hall, Western Australian Museum, Boola Bardip, WA. Sep 26-Oct 1, 2022

First slated to appear at the Awesome Festival in 2020, The Whale’s Tale, presented by Victorian company Born in a Taxi, finally has made it to WA. Presented in the WA Museum, Boola Bardip’s Hackett Hall (the hall that many moons ago was the WA library), the performance takes place, hauntingly and meaningfully under the museum’s well-loved Blue Whale skeleton.

Tröll

By Ralph McCubbin Howell. Directed by Charlotte Bradley and Hannah Smith. Trick of the Light Theatre. Rehearsal Room 1, State Theatre Centre of Western Australia, Perth WA. Sep 27-29, 2022

This gorgeous little show from Trick of the Light Theatre, New Zealand, played a short season as part of the Awesome Festival. Described as “a low-fi wi-fi fable”, this beautifully told story blends the terrors of trolls from the early days of dial-up internet, with the trolls of Icelandic mythology.

Measure of a Moment

By Charles Mercovich. Directed by Robert Johnson. La Mama Courthouse, Carlton. 28 September – 2 October 2022

‘Marvellous Melbourne’ in the 1890s was not, of course, marvellous for everyone.  Not for wage slaves in times of boom and bust.  Not for Connor (Jordan Chodziesner) a sensitive young man with aspirations to be a poet, but miserably working as a bank clerk with an officious supervisor (Luke Toniolo) looking over his shoulder.  His father (Darren Mort) is a bully, and his mother (Clarissa McPherson) is anxious and restricting.  But when Connor meets Nic (Asher Griffith-Jones), a shop assistant, and they click, things look up… 

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